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AI: Jobs, Power & Money
1JUN

NBER: nine in ten firms untouched by AI

2 min read
09:18UTC

A multinational survey of 6,000 executives found most companies see no employment effect from AI. Inside those same firms, bosses and workers hold opposite forecasts.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

Bosses expect AI to cut jobs while their own employees expect it to create them.

A survey of nearly 6,000 senior executives across the United States, United Kingdom, Germany, and Australia, published by the National Bureau of Economic Research, found that 90% of firms report no impact on employment or productivity from AI so far. 1 Sixty-nine per cent of the surveyed firms actively use the technology. Nine in ten see nothing happening.

The contradiction sits inside the forecasts. Executives at these firms predict a 0.7% employment decline over the next three years. Employees at the same companies predict a 0.5% increase. 2 One group expects cuts. The other expects growth. They work in the same buildings, use the same tools, and hold irreconcilable views of what comes next.

During the 1990s offshoring wave, management planned relocations years before workers learned their roles would move overseas. Approximately 3.4 million US manufacturing jobs were lost between 1995 and 2005. Workers could not prepare because they did not know. The NBER data, spanning four countries with different labour market systems, suggests this gap is structural, not cultural . If executives act on private bearish forecasts without informing staff, displacement will arrive as a shock rather than a managed transition.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

A research body surveyed nearly 6,000 bosses across the US, UK, Germany, and Australia and asked whether AI has yet affected hiring or productivity at their companies. Nine in ten said no. But the same bosses predict employment at their firms will fall slightly over the next three years. Workers at those same companies predict it will rise slightly. Someone is wrong. Given that bosses set hiring plans, their forecast is more likely to be self-fulfilling.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Information asymmetry within firms is the structural cause. Executives have access to strategic planning documents, vendor capability assessments, and board-level restructuring discussions that do not reach workers. The 1.2-percentage-point forecast gap (0.7% decline vs 0.5% increase) is more consistent with deliberate non-disclosure than with genuine disagreement.

The 69% active AI adoption rate combined with the 90% null employment impact suggests a deployment phase that is currently affecting task structure without reducing headcount. The NBER finding by Humlum and Vestergaard that LLM adoption produces occupational switching without net changes in hours or earnings supports this reading: impact is happening below the level of employment statistics.

Measurement lag is also structural. Employment surveys capture headcount but not task composition or hiring freeze effects. The Dallas Fed found displacement operating primarily through collapsed job-finding rates among workers under 25, a mechanism invisible to standard employment impact questions.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    The executive-employee forecast gap may widen as deployment accelerates, producing a shock dynamic similar to 1990s offshoring where workers had no preparation time.

    Medium term · Medium
  • Consequence

    Policymakers relying on current employment statistics will underestimate displacement risk because the primary mechanism is hiring suppression, not firing, which appears later in official data.

    Short term · High
  • Meaning

    The 90% null result at 69% adoption rates confirms the technology is in a pre-deployment productivity phase; the employment shock, if it arrives, will be sudden rather than gradual.

    Long term · Medium
First Reported In

Update #3 · The AI jobs data contradicts itself

NBER (Yotzov, Barrero, Bloom, Bunn, Davis et al)· 28 Mar 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
NBER: nine in ten firms untouched by AI
The largest cross-country executive survey reveals a dangerous information gap: employers expect job losses while their own workers expect gains.
Different Perspectives
TSMC and Taiwan chip supply chain
TSMC and Taiwan chip supply chain
Nvidia's 17% headcount growth to 42,000 on $81.6 billion in quarterly revenue depends on TSMC's CoWoS advanced packaging capacity constraining H100 and B200 supply, sustaining margins above 70%. The AI build-out's sole headcount-growth story runs through a Taiwan supply chain that has no parallel in downstream software.
Displaced tech workers globally
Displaced tech workers globally
CrowdStrike's SEC disclosure puts AI attribution on a material regulatory record for the first time, but Oracle's Massachusetts WARN clock expired unfiled after up to 14 workers were logged as remote despite office proximity. The legal apparatus cannot enforce what it cannot see: hybrid reclassification, GCC transfers, and hires never made.
UK workforce and policymakers
UK workforce and policymakers
ONS recorded UK vacancies at 705,000, below the pre-pandemic baseline for the first time, as payrolled employment fell 210,000 year on year with real wage growth at 0.1%. The Bank of England's AI worst case assumed 500,000 additional unemployed from a baseline above 730,000; the UK is already below that floor, and ONS still publishes no AI-exposure breakdown.
India IT workforce and graduates
India IT workforce and graduates
NASSCOM's FY2026 data shows net sector growth of 140,000, but entry-level hiring fell 20-25% as the growth concentrated in in-house GCC offices requiring mid-career specialists. Indian graduates who previously entered through TCS, Infosys and Wipro fresher programmes find that channel closing at both ends: outsourcers cutting and GCCs not hiring at the junior level.
IG Metall and European trade unions
IG Metall and European trade unions
European labour bodies see the market reward pattern, cuts on record revenue, as investor preference for short-term margin extraction over validated AI productivity. They note the EU Digital Omnibus provisional deal has dropped binding employer AI-literacy obligations at the precise moment the ILO-NASK index has quantified that 3.3% of global workers are in the highest AI exposure category.
Federal Reserve Board
Federal Reserve Board
Governor Cook told Stanford's SIEPR on 27 May that speculative-grade software bond spreads have widened on AI-disruption concern, moving AI displacement from a labour observation into the Fed's financial-stability mandate. The Fed cannot resolve structural labour transformation through rate policy, so Cook routed the concern through the one channel the Fed does control.