The Digitalist Papers is a series of essays that aim to offer insights on the “possible futures that the AI revolution might produce.” The first volume, released in September 2024, included twelve essays that explored the intersection of AI and democracy in America. Volume 2, released in December 2025, includes 21 essays that examined the economics of transformative AI.
Volume 2 was edited by Daniel Susskind, Erik Brynjolfsson, Anton Korinek, Alex Pentland, and Ajay Agrawal. “AI capabilities have been relentlessly improving across a variety of benchmarks. And in November 2022, a new chapter in this story began,” they wrote in the Volume 2 Introduction. While Volume 1 explored the implications of AI for democracy, “this second volume turns to its economic dimensions, focusing on how transformative AI might alter production, work, and prosperity itself. It brings together leading economists, technologists, philosophers, and others to explore the key economic challenges and opportunities of ‘transformative AI,’ or TAI. Most significantly, though, it is also focused on how we might respond to whatever lies ahead.”
“In what follows, we define ‘TAI’ as advanced AI systems that will usher in an economic transformation comparable to the Industrial Revolution, but on a much shorter timescale,” they wrote. “They exhibit intelligence surpassing the most capable humans across multiple fields, capable of performing not only routine cognitive work, but also complex tasks like solving mathematical theorems, creating novel works, or directing experiments autonomously.”
AI’s technological progress is often described using terms like artificial general intelligence (AGI) and artificial superintelligence (ASI) — that is, AI systems that will eventually match or surpass human capabilities across virtually all cognitive tasks. Transformative AI (TAI), by contrast, reflects a growing consensus in policy circles that even if AI does not fully reach human-level cognition, it could still have an impact on society comparable to the agricultural or industrial revolutions. (more…)
