The sectors poised for the biggest AI disruption are healthcare and education, which are currently inefficient and the largest contributors to U.S. inflation. AI promises to deliver personalized services in both fields at a fraction of the cost, creating a massive deflationary effect.
Mala Gaonkar argues the most profound applications of AI are improving non-tech industries. For example, AI has improved the accuracy and speed of medical scans by 70% and is transforming the 300 million surgeries performed globally each year through robotics, reducing errors.
While fears of AI-driven job loss are valid in some industries, healthcare faces a massive and growing supply-demand mismatch. With record shortages of clinicians and unlimited demand, AI is less a job destroyer and more a critical tool to augment existing workers.
While AI's market performance has been concentrated in the tech sector, its greatest future value will be unlocked as it transforms other industries like healthcare, logistics, and consumer goods. Buchwald believes investors are underestimating this broadening impact, which will create new winners and losers across the entire economy.
Beyond simple productivity gains, AI will eliminate the need for entire service-based transactions, such as paying for basic legal documents or second medical opinions. This substitution of paid services with free AI output can act as a direct deflationary headwind, a counterintuitive effect to the typical AI-fueled growth narrative.
Contrary to expectations, analysis shows that sectors with low profit per employee, such as healthcare and consumer staples, stand to gain the most from AI. High-tech firms already have very high profit per employee, so the relative impact of AI-driven efficiency is smaller.
While AI is expected to be disinflationary long-term, its immediate impact could be inflationary. The massive capital expenditure required to build AI infrastructure will significantly increase demand in a fully employed economy before the productivity benefits are realized.
In a high-impact AI scenario, massive productivity growth leads to gluts of goods and services. This causes prices to collapse, creating massive deflation. This deflation acts as a universal pay raise, dramatically increasing everyone's real wealth and purchasing power.
As AI gets exponentially smarter, it will solve major problems in power, chip efficiency, and labor, driving down costs across the economy. This extreme efficiency creates a powerful deflationary force, which is a greater long-term macroeconomic risk than the current AI investment bubble popping.
A rapid, broad adoption of AI could significantly boost productivity, leading to faster real GDP growth while simultaneously causing disinflation. This supply-side-driven scenario would present a puzzle for the Fed, potentially allowing it to lower interest rates to normalize policy even amid a strong economy.
Khosla predicts AI will make services like education, medicine, and legal advice nearly free. This creates a deflationary economy where the societal challenge shifts from optimizing efficiency to distributing abundance.