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A 40% reduction in work due to AI can be framed as either a catastrophic unemployment crisis or a utopian 3-day workweek. Economist Alex Tabarrok argues the outcome is not determined by the technology itself, but by policy decisions regarding the distribution of work and wealth, such as creating more national holidays.

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Pessimism about AI-driven job losses overlooks historical precedent. The transition from an agricultural to an industrial economy caused massive job displacement but ultimately created far more new jobs. Similarly, AI will likely generate new, currently unimaginable roles and industries.

Fears of mass unemployment from AI overlook a key economic principle: human desire is not fixed. As technology makes existing goods and services cheaper, humans invent new things to want. The Industrial Revolution didn't end work; it just created new kinds of jobs to satisfy new desires.

Contrary to fears of mass unemployment, AI will create massive deflationary pressure, making goods and services cheaper. This will allow people to support their lifestyles by working fewer hours and retiring earlier, leading to a labor shortage as new AI-driven industries simultaneously create new jobs.

Contrary to fears of mass unemployment, AI will create new industries and roles. While transitional unemployment will occur, the demand for more energy, AI-related regulation (e.g., government lawyers), and new leisure sectors will generate significant job growth, offsetting the displacement from automation.

AI's impact on labor will likely follow a deceptive curve: an initial boost in productivity as it augments human workers, followed by a crash as it masters their domains and replaces them entirely. This creates a false sense of security, delaying necessary policy responses.

Rather than causing mass unemployment, AI's productivity gains will lead to shorter work weeks and more leisure time. This shift creates new economic opportunities and jobs in sectors that cater to this expanded free time, like live events and hospitality, thus rebalancing the labor market.

Political demands that new technology must benefit the specific workers it replaces are fundamentally flawed. This logic ignores progress. The goal shouldn't be to preserve obsolete jobs but to ensure technology benefits civilization as a whole by creating abundance while managing the difficult labor transition.

The US economy is currently experiencing near-zero job growth despite typical 2% productivity gains. A significant increase in productivity driven by AI, without a corresponding surge in economic output, could paradoxically lead to outright job losses. This creates a scenario where positive productivity news could have negative employment consequences.

AI's economic impact is far more benign if it automates a small fraction of tasks across many professions rather than entire jobs. If AI handles 10% of everyone's workload, it results in a direct 10% productivity increase for the whole economy, making society wealthier with virtually no job displacement.

The fear of AI-driven mass unemployment is a classic economic fallacy. Like past technologies, AI is a tool that raises the marginal productivity of individual workers. More productive workers don't work less; they take on more ambitious projects and create new kinds of jobs, increasing the overall demand for labor.