AI adoption in America: Who, what, and where

Author:

McElheran Kristina1ORCID,Li J. Frank2,Brynjolfsson Erik3,Kroff Zachary4,Dinlersoz Emin4,Foster Lucia4,Zolas Nikolas4

Affiliation:

1. UTSC and Rotman School of Management University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

2. Sauder School of Business University of British Columbia Vancouver British Columbia Canada

3. Stanford Digital Economy Lab Stanford University Stanford California USA

4. Center for Economic Studies U.S. Census Bureau Suitland‐Silver Hill Maryland USA

Abstract

AbstractWe study the early adoption and diffusion of five artificial intelligence (AI)‐related technologies (automated‐guided vehicles, machine learning, machine vision, natural language processing, and voice recognition) as documented in the 2018 Annual Business Survey of 850,000 firms across the United States. We find that fewer than 6% of firms used any of the AI‐related technologies we measure, though most very large firms reported at least some AI use. Weighted by employment, average adoption was just over 18%. AI use in production, while varying considerably by industry, was found in every sector of the economy and clustered with emerging technologies, such as cloud computing and robotics. Among dynamic young firms, AI use was highest alongside more‐educated, more‐experienced, and younger owners, including owners motivated by bringing new ideas to market or helping the community. AI adoption was also more common in startups displaying indicators of high‐growth entrepreneurship, including venture capital funding, recent product and process innovation, and growth‐oriented business strategies. Early AI adoption was far from evenly distributed: a handful of “superstar” cities and emerging hubs led startups' adoption of AI. These patterns of early AI use foreshadow economic and social impacts far beyond this limited initial diffusion, with the possibility of a growing “AI divide” if early patterns persist.

Funder

Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada

Publisher

Wiley

Reference108 articles.

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