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forumposter123@protonmail.com's avatar

The best way for AI to raise GDP would not necessarily improve human welfare.

In my industry AI is used for up-coding, that is finding ways to increase the number of Hierarchical Condition Category codes that a person has. It does this precisely by prompting the doctor during the visit to write up the codes. This increases revenue from MAPD (thus, increases government spending) which "increases" GDP.

A similar dynamic seems to play out in sports gambling (AI attuned to figure out how to manipulate people into betting).

Like a lot of technology I can imagine good or ill uses. But GDP only measures whether a purchase was made or not.

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Francis Turner's avatar

Coincidentally I've been thinking about how GDP (and related measures) is failing to capture perceived wealth. A lot of things seems to fail to be properly captured, but technological improvements seem to be particularly poorly caught.

If I can use an AI to write half a dozen emails that would normally take me 10minutes each that's an hour of my life I've got back (less time taken to read the emails before hitting send). That number totally fails to show up in GDP

Worse, if your case 7 applies and we can use AI to program our lawnmowers, roombas etc. we'll see a diminution in the amount of human provided services in those areas and thus, for those people who pay for gardeners etc. rather than do it themselves, a reduction in calculated GDP because they no longer need to pay Jose, Maria and their friends to do it for them. (Although some of those services are already missed by GDP since they are paid in cash and undeclared by the recipient). But that dimunution is in fact false because the people who used to hire gardeners and cleaners and now have a robot to do it are saving time and money thanks to the new technology. That ought to make them, and the nation, richer not poorer

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