Artificial intelligence and the economy of the future
Episode Transcript
Episode transcript coming soon.
Joining Cardiff for this episode is Avi Goldfarb, Rotman Chair In Artificial Intelligence and Healthcare At The Rotman School Of Management, University Of Toronto, and the co-author (with his fellow economists Ajay Agrawal and Joshua Gans) of an excellent new book, "Power and Prediction: The Disruptive Economics of Artificial Intelligence".
In their chat, Avi and Cardiff discuss:
Why AI is best understood as a "prediction technology"
Examples of AI already in use
Which parts of the economy could be transformed by AI, and how
Historical analogies to previous eras of widespread technological disruption
How AI will change the way people and companies make decisions
Why this change will shift institutions away from blunt rules and towards individual discretion
In the labor market, who will gain and who will lose from the adoption of AI
What the use of AI might teach us about what it means to be human
And all throughout the chat, they look at the fundamental question of whether artificial intelligence is about to make the economy—and the world—a whole lot weirder. And if so, just how far along that path to weirdness are we already?
Related links:
"Prediction and Power", by Ajay Agrawal, Joshua Gans, and Avi Goldfarb
"The impact of AI on the future of workforces", The White House CEA and the European Commission
“Before the Flood”, by Sam Hammond
"The golden age of AI-generated art is here", by Tom Faber
"Historical analogies for large language models", by Dynomight Internet Website