AI will supercharge productivity. Will workers benefit? | The Business Standard
Skip to main content
  • Epaper
  • Economy
    • Aviation
    • Banking
    • Bazaar
    • Budget
    • Industry
    • NBR
    • RMG
    • Corporates
  • Stocks
  • Analysis
  • Videos
    • TBS Today
    • TBS Stories
    • TBS World
    • News of the day
    • TBS Programs
    • Podcast
    • Editor's Pick
  • World+Biz
  • Features
    • Panorama
    • The Big Picture
    • Pursuit
    • Habitat
    • Thoughts
    • Splash
    • Mode
    • Tech
    • Explorer
    • Brands
    • In Focus
    • Book Review
    • Earth
    • Food
    • Luxury
    • Wheels
  • Subscribe
    • Epaper
    • GOVT. Ad
  • More
    • Sports
    • TBS Graduates
    • Bangladesh
    • Supplement
    • Infograph
    • Archive
    • Gallery
    • Long Read
    • Interviews
    • Offbeat
    • Magazine
    • Climate Change
    • Health
    • Cartoons
  • বাংলা
The Business Standard

Saturday
May 17, 2025

Sign In
Subscribe
  • Epaper
  • Economy
    • Aviation
    • Banking
    • Bazaar
    • Budget
    • Industry
    • NBR
    • RMG
    • Corporates
  • Stocks
  • Analysis
  • Videos
    • TBS Today
    • TBS Stories
    • TBS World
    • News of the day
    • TBS Programs
    • Podcast
    • Editor's Pick
  • World+Biz
  • Features
    • Panorama
    • The Big Picture
    • Pursuit
    • Habitat
    • Thoughts
    • Splash
    • Mode
    • Tech
    • Explorer
    • Brands
    • In Focus
    • Book Review
    • Earth
    • Food
    • Luxury
    • Wheels
  • Subscribe
    • Epaper
    • GOVT. Ad
  • More
    • Sports
    • TBS Graduates
    • Bangladesh
    • Supplement
    • Infograph
    • Archive
    • Gallery
    • Long Read
    • Interviews
    • Offbeat
    • Magazine
    • Climate Change
    • Health
    • Cartoons
  • বাংলা
SATURDAY, MAY 17, 2025
AI will supercharge productivity. Will workers benefit?

Panorama

Nir Kaissar, Bloomberg
28 May, 2023, 10:30 am
Last modified: 28 May, 2023, 10:35 am

Related News

  • Students are outsmarting artificial intelligence detectors with artificial stupidity
  • Quantum computing: It's not just a ‘bit’ more powerful
  • AI development cannot be left to market whim, UN experts warn
  • Machines aren’t coming for the lords of finance, yet
  • Is AI going to be a knight in shining armour or a grim reaper for us?

AI will supercharge productivity. Will workers benefit?

Artificial intelligence promises greater gains than any technology before it, but it threatens to worsen pay and wealth inequality

Nir Kaissar, Bloomberg
28 May, 2023, 10:30 am
Last modified: 28 May, 2023, 10:35 am
Illustration: Bloomberg
Illustration: Bloomberg

Productivity growth, or the ability to produce more per hour, is supposed to make everyone richer. The idea is that greater productivity allows companies to make more money, which workers and owners share through higher wages and more valuable businesses. But since the 1980s, productivity gains have gone almost exclusively to executives and owners of companies, leaving average workers behind and fueling the widest wage and wealth gaps on record.  

Enter artificial intelligence, which promises greater productivity growth than any technology before it. If AI delivers, and those productivity gains continue to elude everyday workers, wage and wealth gaps will widen further, perhaps significantly, adding to the burdens that high rates of economic inequality are already placing on the economy, the labour market and the political and social environment. It doesn't have to be this way, and now is the time to consider policies that would help everyone share in AI's anticipated bounty.

The divergence between productivity growth and pay raises, which has swelled over the past four decades, is well known to economists. I'm citing numbers from the Economic Policy Institute, but they're roughly the same no matter how one slices them. What they show is that productivity and compensation for ordinary workers grew in near lockstep from the end of World War II through the 1970s. Since then, however, productivity has grown nearly four times faster than pay for ordinary workers, the difference going to shareholders and the most highly paid workers.

The Business Standard Google News Keep updated, follow The Business Standard's Google news channel

The results are glaring. Wage ratios — the difference between the highest- and lowest-paid workers — have surged in recent decades. The best known among them, the CEO-to-worker pay ratio, climbed to an astounding 399-to-1 in 2021 from just 20-to-1 in 1965. The US's Gini index, which measures the degree of income inequality, has trended sharply higher since the 1980s and is now the highest among developed countries. Wealth gaps, too, show a wide and growing divergence between the richest Americans and everyone else.  

The notion of two Americas divided along economic lines is quickly becoming a reality. US private schools bestow a world-class education and a glide path to elite universities on a fortunate few, while public schools struggle to teach basic reading, if they can find teachers. 

Wealthy Americans are turning to concierge medicine, which largely operates outside the impenetrable US health-care system, while everyone else struggles to find a doctor, if they can afford one at all. Private planes shuttle rich travellers around while ordinary Americans are crammed into ever tighter commercial airlines, assuming they earn enough to travel. Increasingly, the richest Americans have less and less need or opportunity to encounter their less fortunate countrymates. 

There are good reasons to worry that AI will deepen those divides. The previous two productivity booms — led by personal computers and the internet — helped concentrate market share across industries, whether it was Apple Inc. in personal computing and smartphones, Alphabet Inc. in web search, Microsoft Corp. in business software, Meta Platforms Inc. in social media or Amazon.com Inc. in online retailing and cloud computing. Less competition has made the winners bigger, more profitable and more powerful, enriching owners and executives while they push around workers.  

Those same companies have a big lead in the AI race. Only this time, AI also threatens to displace highly paid workers, from engineers at big technology companies to professionals such as lawyers, consultants and money managers. "This is going to be very different from the past 40 years, when blue-collar workers lost out and white-collar workers benefited from technological progress," Anton Korinek, an AI researcher, told Bloomberg News. "This is a reversal where white-collar workers are the ones that are easier to automate now."

If true, the number of workers excluded from technology-led productivity growth is set to grow — and possibly to a much greater degree than in the past. Korinek co-wrote a new paper from the Brookings Institution estimating that AI may increase productivity by as much as 2.3% to 3.3% a year over the next 20 years, well higher than the Congressional Budget Office's projection of 1.5% a year and realised productivity growth of 1.2% a year since 1980. Imagine triple the productivity growth shared by an even smaller percentage of Americans; it would make today's inequality look like a socialist utopia.  

Some argue that the degree of inequality is unimportant if everyone is doing well. But that's far from reality because, by any count, tens of millions of full-time US workers don't earn a living wage. So it's not just that economic inequality is high; it's that even before mass adoption of AI, an alarming number of workers struggle to survive and have little hope of building any wealth.

The good news is that there are policy interventions that could help narrow wage and wealth gaps. The US can adopt a system of co-determination like the decades-old one in Germany in which workers are represented on companies' boards to ensure that they have a say on pay. Financial regulators can require companies to disclose compensation data so that the impact of AI on wages can be measured and addressed. That data would allow policymakers to devise targeted incentives for companies to pay workers a living wage. The US could also establish a sovereign wealth fund that would invest in AI and use some of the profits to aid workers displaced by the bots.

AI may very well usher in the next productivity boom. But if it isn't shared more broadly than the technology-charged gains of the past four decades, economic inequality — with all its attendant harms — will deepen.  


Nir Kaissar is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering markets. He is the founder of Unison Advisors, an asset management firm.

Disclaimer: This article first appeared on Bloomberg, and is published by special syndication arrangement.

 

Features

Artificial Intelligence

Comments

While most comments will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive, moderation decisions are subjective. Published comments are readers’ own views and The Business Standard does not endorse any of the readers’ comments.

Top Stories

  • One of the accused being escorted by police at the tribunal premises on 27 April. Photo: Collected
    Main accused gets death penalty in Asiya rape, murder case as court completes trial in 34 days
  • Infograph: TBS
    How Bangladeshi workers lost $1.3b in remittance fees, exchange rate volatility in 2024
  • Infograph: TBS
    Despite laws and pledges, migrant workers remain prey to exploitation

MOST VIEWED

  • The workers began their programme at 8am on 23 April 2025 near the Chowrhas intersection, Kushtia. Photos: TBS
    BAT factory closure prolongs 'as authorities refuse to accept' protesting workers' demands
  • Representational image. Photo: Freepik
    Country’s first private equity fund winding up amid poor investor response
  • BGB members on high alert along the Bangladesh-India border in Brahmanbaria on 16 May 2025. Photo: TBS
    BGB, locals foil BSF attempt to push-in 750 Indian nationals thru Brahmanbaria border
  • Banks struggle in their core business as net interest income falls
    Banks struggle in their core business as net interest income falls
  • A teacher offers water to a Jagannath University student breaking their hunger strike at Kakrail Mosque intersection, as protesters announce the end of their movement today (16 May) after their demands were met. Photo: TBS
    JnU protesters end strike as govt agrees to accept demands
  • Efforts to recover Dhaka’s encroached, terminally degraded canals are not new. Photo: TBS
    Dhaka's 220km canals to be revived within this year: Dhaka North

Related News

  • Students are outsmarting artificial intelligence detectors with artificial stupidity
  • Quantum computing: It's not just a ‘bit’ more powerful
  • AI development cannot be left to market whim, UN experts warn
  • Machines aren’t coming for the lords of finance, yet
  • Is AI going to be a knight in shining armour or a grim reaper for us?

Features

Illustration: TBS

Cassettes, cards, and a contactless future: NFC’s expanding role in Bangladesh

17h | Panorama
Photo: Collected

The never-ending hype around China Mart and Thailand Haul

18h | Mode
Hatitjheel’s water has turned black and emits a foul odour, causing significant public distress. Photo: Syed Zakir Hossain

Blackened waters and foul stench: Why can't Rajuk control Hatirjheel pollution?

22h | Panorama
An old-fashioned telescope, also from an old ship, is displayed at a store at Chattogram’s Madam Bibir Hat area. PHOTO: TBS

NO SCRAP LEFT BEHIND: How Bhatiari’s ship graveyard still furnishes homes across Bangladesh

2d | Panorama

More Videos from TBS

Barcelona has overcome the setbacks and reached the pinnacle of the Spanish league

Barcelona has overcome the setbacks and reached the pinnacle of the Spanish league

29m | TBS SPORTS
Death sentence for Hitu Sheikh, the prime accused in the rape and murder case of child Achiya

Death sentence for Hitu Sheikh, the prime accused in the rape and murder case of child Achiya

1h | TBS News Updates
India is not raising tariffs, Delhi refutes Trump's claim

India is not raising tariffs, Delhi refutes Trump's claim

14h | TBS World
News of The Day, 16 MAY 2025

News of The Day, 16 MAY 2025

15h | TBS News of the day
EMAIL US
contact@tbsnews.net
FOLLOW US
WHATSAPP
+880 1847416158
The Business Standard
  • About Us
  • Contact us
  • Sitemap
  • Advertisement
  • Privacy Policy
  • Comment Policy
Copyright © 2025
The Business Standard All rights reserved
Technical Partner: RSI Lab

Contact Us

The Business Standard

Main Office -4/A, Eskaton Garden, Dhaka- 1000

Phone: +8801847 416158 - 59

Send Opinion articles to - oped.tbs@gmail.com

For advertisement- sales@tbsnews.net