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NoahpinioNOT's avatar

The economists' skepticism on AI growth might be the most interesting data point in this whole roundup. The gap between capability forecasts (where all groups agree) and economic impact forecasts (where they diverge) is basically telling us we're in the Solow Paradox again. Every GPT follows this pattern: impressive tech, bolted onto existing workflows, disappointing macro numbers, then decades of institutional redesign before the real payoff. I wrote a longer take here: https://noahpinionot.substack.com/p/you-can-see-ai-everywhere-except

Gordon Strause's avatar

Noah: In general I'm a big fan. But here is a good example of why critics who accuse folks like you of hyping AI have a point:

You write "The “moderate” scenario here would have AI able to write high-quality novels, handle coding tasks that would take humans five days, create semi-autonomous labs, and use robots to perform basic household tasks. ... Why do economists think that even near-godlike AI wouldn’t translate into fast growth?"

The idea that the ability to write "high quality novels," create semi-autonomous labs, and perform basic household tasks is remotely "godlike" is absurd.

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