
Erik Brynjolfsson
Stanford economist whose 34:1 AI hire-suppression finding anchors the US displacement measurement debate.
Last refreshed: 20 June 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
How does Stanford calculate that AI suppresses nearly a million US hires a year?
Timeline for Erik Brynjolfsson
Mentioned in: Challenger: US cuts fall 53% in June
AI: Jobs, Power & MoneyMentioned in: AI cuts hit record 38,579 in May
AI: Jobs, Power & MoneyStanford fills the AI jobs data gap
AI: Jobs, Power & MoneyMentioned in: MIT economist: AI layoffs are a cover story
AI: Jobs, Power & MoneyMentioned in: Salesforce down 32% for not firing
AI: Jobs, Power & MoneyWhat is Erik Brynjolfsson's finding on AI job losses?
Is The Second Machine Age prediction coming true?
Why does JOLTS show more AI job losses than layoff announcements?
Background
Erik Brynjolfsson is director of the Stanford Digital Economy Lab and one of the most influential economists studying AI's effects on labour markets. He co-authored The Second Machine Age (2014) with Andrew McAfee, arguing that digital technologies would reshape labour markets faster than workers could adapt, and he has tracked AI adoption metrics since the mid-2010s, serving on government advisory panels on automation. His core argument, that productivity gains from AI accrue faster to capital than to labour, has anchored a decade of policy and corporate debate.
In April 2026 his team applied the JOLTS hiring rate, 3.1% in February 2026 and the lowest since April 2020, to the US nonfarm workforce of 158.6 million, calculating that AI is suppressing roughly 950,000 to one million annual hires against the 2023 pace. Against the Challenger, Gray & Christmas tally of 27,645 declared AI layoffs through March 2026, that produces a ratio of roughly 34 suppressed hires per declared layoff: the real AI labour impact operates primarily through jobs never posted rather than cuts announced in press releases. The age-specific employment data sharpens the picture: workers aged 22 to 25 in AI-exposed occupations sit 16% below late-2022 levels, while colleagues over 30 are up 6 to 12%.
The June 2026 Update 14 measurement debate placed Brynjolfsson's JOLTS analysis at the centre of a broader reckoning: a ResumeBuilder survey found 59% of hiring managers deliberately overstated AI as a layoff cause, Oxford Economics counted genuine AI-driven cuts at 4.5% of US layoffs through November 2025, and the Bureau of Labor Statistics had already skipped its scheduled GenAI workplace publication. His suppression-rate framework is now the closest approximation to a federal displacement baseline that US policymakers have, making him a central figure in the data fight the Hawley-Warner Senate Coalition is pressing and the Leading the Future super PAC is spending to forestall.