In the Shadow of Smith’s Invisible Hand: Risks to Economic Stability and Social Wellbeing in the Age of Intelligence

Author:

Occhipinti Jo-An1,Hynes William2,Prodan Ante3,Eyre Harris A.4,Green Roy5,Burrow Sharan6,Tanner Marcel7,Buchanan John1,Ujdur Goran1,Destrebecq Frederic8,Song Christine1,Carnevale Steven9,Hickie Ian B.1,Heffernan Mark3

Affiliation:

1. The University of Sydney

2. World Bank

3. Western Sydney University

4. Rice University

5. University of Technology Sydney

6. London School of Economics Grantham Institute

7. Swiss Academies of Artes and Sciences

8. European Brain Council

9. Point Cypress

Abstract

Abstract

Work is fundamental to societal prosperity and mental health, providing financial security, identity, purpose, and social integration. Job insecurity, underemployment and unemployment are well-documented risk factors for mental health issues and suicide. The emergence of generative artificial intelligence (AI) has catalysed debate on job displacement and its corollary impacts on individual and social wellbeing. Some argue that many new jobs and industries will emerge to offset the displacement, while others foresee a widespread decoupling of economic productivity from human input threatening jobs on an unprecedented scale. This study explores the conditions under which both may be true and examines the potential for a self-reinforcing cycle of recessionary pressures that would necessitate sustained government intervention to maintain job security and economic stability. A system dynamics model was developed to undertake ex ante analysis of the effect of AI-capital deepening on labour underutilisation and demand in the economy. Results indicate that even a moderate increase in the AI-capital-to-labour ratio could increase labour underutilisation to double its current level, decrease per capita disposable income by 26% (95% interval, 20.6% − 31.8%), and decrease the consumption index by 21% (95% interval, 13.6% − 28.3%) by mid-2050. To prevent a reduction in per capita disposable income due to the estimated increase in underutilization, at least a 10.8-fold increase in the new job creation rate would be necessary. Results demonstrate the feasibility of an AI-capital-to-labour ratio threshold beyond which even high rates of new job creation cannot prevent declines in consumption. The precise threshold will vary across economies, emphasizing the urgent need for empirical research tailored to specific contexts. This study underscores the need for cross-sectoral government measures to ensure a smooth transition to an AI-dominated economy to safeguard the Mental Wealth of nations.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Reference37 articles.

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4. Insecure Workers: Employment Relations in Transition;Kalleberg AL;American Sociological Review,2009

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