On December 29, the WSJ published “Will AI Help or Hurt Workers?,” an article based on a research paper by Aidan Toner-Rodgers, a second year PhD student in MIT’s Economics Department.
One of the reasons the WSJ article caught my attention is that it featured a photo of the MIT graduate student in between two of the world’s top economists whose research I’ve closely followed for years: Daron Acemoglu, — who in October was named a co-receipient of the 2024 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Science, and David Autor (along with his dog Shelby) — who was a co-chair of a multi-year, MIT-wide Taskforce on the impact of AI on “The Work of the Future.”
Both professors raved about Toner-Rodger’s research even though they have somewhat different points of view on the impact of AI on workers. Professor Autor is more optimistic, arguing that “AI Could Actually Help Rebuild The Middle Class.” His friend and colleague, professor Acemoglu, worries that AI could actually worsen income inequality and not do all that much for productivity and GDP growth over the coming decade. “For all the talk about artificial intelligence upending the world, its economic effects remain uncertain,” he said in a recent interview. “There is massive investment in AI but little clarity about what it will produce.” But they both agreed that “the research by Toner-Rodgers, 26 years old, is a step toward figuring out what AI might do to the workforce, by examining AI’s effect in the real world.”
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