> undeniable, massive productivity gains.
Take any stock index, remove AI stocks, what do you see? That's right! Nothing...
So where is all the productivity going? Where is the value? Where are the massive unemployment stats or the millions of new startups making big $$$?
The original point of the stock market was to fund gigantic society-level projects (like railroads). Modern VC has replaced some of that at smaller scales but not all of it at the largest scales. So this could just be the stock market performing the function it was designed to perform -- helping fund something transformative on a societal level.
Literally right here. eComm business turned around from losing money to profitable in less than 12 months after vibecoding a bunch of solutions to variousn problems we were having.
> Take any stock index, remove AI stocks, what do you see? That's right! Nothing...
Where did all the stock gains go before AI?
FAANG / MAG-7.
Was everything from 2012-2020 fake, too?
Not sure what your point is. Stock markets are based on money going into securities based on estimated future value. Even if AI were doubling productivity at a non-AI company, there is more leverage to that money going into an AI company.
The question is, is AI leading to massive productivity gains in companies that implement it? AI productivity gains take time to diffuse, but so far companies in the S&P 500 are seeing very high growth. YOY earnings growth rate for the S&P 500 is 21.7% https://advantage.factset.com/hubfs/Website/Resources%20Sect...
Writing about AI, destroying the planet for data centers, there's a lot of money to be made.
That being said, AI seems kind of miraculous sometimes.
Similar to cars. So enticing that we make everything else in the world worse in order to maximize the profit, make it indispensable, subsidize it, and make the dependency on it irreversible.
And it's not even something to blame individual people for.
Driving away from all the other cars to spend a weekend feels like freedom.
Using AI to answer a question feels like a "bicycle for the mind".
But in fact it's more like a car. It requires massive resources and creates perverse incentives, and the result is ineffective and corrupt.
Both cars and AI are amazing technology and extremely useful, but using them is not an individual responsibility. It requires societal subsidy.