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clay shöntrup's avatar

or as claude explains when i walk it thru basic econ 101 analysis and ask it to state it back to me with verification:

the "maximize the pie and redistribute, but the record isn't great" line is the core mistake. the record is bad because we either didn't redistribute at all or did it with distortionary tools. that's no evidence against separating efficiency from distribution. the second welfare theorem says you can land on any distribution you want at an efficient allocation with lump-sum transfers. the practical version is taxing things in fixed supply, mainly land rent, where there's no behavior to distort.

a compute tax fails for a concrete reason, not a timing one. it's a tax on an intermediate input. production efficiency theory says don't tax intermediate goods, because firms substitute away from the taxed factor and you eat deadweight loss with nothing to show for it. waiting for the industry to mature doesn't fix that. it's the wrong base permanently.

equalizing rates on labor and capital doesn't help either. both are distortionary bases. setting them equal just spreads the deadweight loss around instead of shrinking it.

the distribution problem with ai is a rent problem. returns pool in owners of scarce factors, network effects, market power, and eventually land. tax those rents, which you can do at zero or negative deadweight loss, and pay it out as cash. that's the efficient fix and about the only thing on your list that survives contact with the theory.

"giving people equity in ai" is the right instinct. it's a citizen's dividend funded by rent capture in different clothes. cash also beats wage insurance, retraining, and mandated shorter weeks for the same reason every time: people spend it on their own highest-value use with no distortion, while the others bolt on moral hazard or labor-market distortions.

you don't have to choose between the pie and the slices. you only think you do if you assume the only way to fund redistribution is to tax production.

Angela Richardson's avatar

If the only danger from advanced AI were job loss then I would agree. But we are not talking about a calculator here. Or a tractor. We are talking about a machine that has just solved a bunch of long-standing mathematical problems.

Once AI has advanced robotics far enough to be able to displace all human workers, human extinction is pretty much inevitable.

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