6 months ago
- Productivity surges in specific industries can lead to cheaper goods and services in those sectors, while making other sectors more expensive due to wage competition.
- Jevons Paradox describes how increased efficiency in production leads to higher consumption rather than reduced usage, exemplified by the explosion in computing power and its applications.
- Baumol's Cost Disease explains why sectors with stagnant productivity (like live music or dog walking) become more expensive as wages rise to compete with more productive industries.
- AI adoption is expected to drive productivity in certain services, making them cheaper (Jevons effect), while other services unaffected by AI will see price increases (Baumol effect).
- Regulatory protections for human roles in automated jobs may lead to high wages for the remaining human tasks, creating economic distortions within single jobs.
- The interplay between Jevons and Baumol effects highlights how technological progress spreads wealth but also creates economic disparities across different sectors.