Labor AI, tech, & the economy
Topic AI, tech, & the economy

Economists have long understood technological development to be the main driver of sustained economic growth. Yet the broadly shared benefits from technological advancements are not automatic. Indeed, they historically are a result of how institutions direct the development and deployment of technology.

The use of artificial intelligence has the potential to transform the U.S. economy, but policymakers lack the fundamental information they need to ensure that AI technologies benefit workers and society at large. Equitable Growth is providing evidence on how these transformative new technologies are being adopted, for what purpose, and to what effects, while also identifying evidence gaps and funding social scientists to conduct rigorous research to fill these gaps.

Featured work

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How artificial intelligence uncouples hard work from fair wages through ‘surveillance pay’ practices—and how to fix it

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Adoption of generative AI will have different effects across jobs in the U.S. logistics workforce

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Analogies for AI policymaking

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Tackling AI, taxation, and the fair distribution of AI’s benefits

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Estimating the prevalence of automated management and surveillance technologies at work and their impact on workers’ well-being

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Workplace surveillance is becoming the new normal for U.S. workers

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Explore Content in AI, tech, & the economy32

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New evidence on the success of gig-worker pay standards for ride-hail drivers

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Testimony by Michael Kades before the Subcommittee on Antitrust, Commercial, and Administrative Law on digital markets

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Competitive Edge

Competitive Edge: Jason Furman testifies on the role of data and privacy in online platforms’ market power

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How U.S. companies harm workers by making them independent contractors

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How job-matching technologies can build a fairer and more efficient U.S. labor market

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Competitive Edge

Competitive Edge: Antitrust enforcers need reinforcements to keep pace with algorithms, machine learning, and artificial intelligence

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New data on contingent workers in the United States

LaborInequality & Mobility
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