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Nino's avatar

I feel unreasonably upset that these posts don't make use of the mundane utility of LLMs' ability to fix typos.

- "Among the thing" → "Among the things"

- "riff of something" → "riff off something"

- "tie workers hands" → "tie workers' hands" (missing possessive apostrophe)

- "tying their workers hands" → "tying their workers' hands" (same issue)

- "give parties option" → "give parties the option"

- "Sumo Burja" → "Samo Burja"

- "this kid of social mastery" → "this kind of social mastery"

- "and OpenClaw so on" → "and OpenClaw and so on" (missing "and")

- "the rate algorithmic efficiency improvements" → "the rate of algorithmic efficiency improvements"

- "Nate Sores" → "Nate Soares"

Methos5000's avatar

There are multiple potential reasons to explain job growth being adjusted down and GDP going up not being AI related.

Workers putting in more hours, general process improvement, capital investment. AI or automation could be part of increased productivity, but it's not not the only source

Likewise if things cost more, that raises GDP, so inflation and tariffs play a role. Even companies buying ahead to get ahead of tariffs would add later growth to GDP today that might not be there tomorrow as a result.

Government spending which went up substantially on military is GDP without increasing productivity.

Estimates seem to be that somewhere around 25% of GDP growth in 2025 is related to AI, but then you have to account for the internal aspect of that, buying GPUs, building data centers because that's circular, making the net impact lower. Much of AI's impact currently is AI industry internal impact compared to down stream impacts. Some estimates are as high as 30% of that initial 25% GDP growth that is derived from AI is due to productivity gains in other companies, but most estimates seem to be lower. So you're really talking about maybe 10% of GDP growth being from AI's impact on other companies having better productivity.

Not to say it won't have significant impact in the future, but assuming GDP growth today and virtually no job growth means AI is the primary driver of GDP growth is shallow thinking to reach the conclusion you want to reach.

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