Senators Mark Warner (D-VA) and Mike Rounds (R-SD) introduced the Economy of the Future Commission Act (S.3339), creating a bipartisan commission of industry and academic experts with two deliverables: a 7-month interim report on projected AI employment changes and a 13-month final report with legislative recommendations on education, retraining, taxation, and unemployment insurance 1. Google, Microsoft, Meta, IBM, and the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation have endorsed the measure 2.
The bill extends Warner's earlier legislative effort with Senator Josh Hawley (R-MO) — the AI-Related Job Impacts Clarity Act , which required companies and federal agencies to report AI-related layoffs to the Department of Labor. That bill measured the problem. S.3339 is designed to prescribe solutions, with its mandate explicitly covering taxation and unemployment insurance reform. The Brookings Institution has already mapped the terrain: Anton Korinek and Benjamin Lockwood's working paper found approximately three-quarters of US federal tax revenue derives from labour taxation 3 — a fiscal base that contracts with each position eliminated.
The commission's industry backers are also the industry's largest AI investors. The same companies endorsing this study-first approach are collectively planning $650–690 billion in AI infrastructure spending this year — and several have announced substantial workforce reductions in the same period. That alignment is not inherently compromising; these firms possess data and operational knowledge essential to credible policy. But a commission whose expert panel draws heavily from the companies driving displacement will face scrutiny over whether its recommendations protect workers or protect the pace of adoption.
Study commissions have a long American pedigree and a mixed record. The 1964 National Commission on Technology, Automation, and Economic Progress spent two years producing recommendations Congress largely ignored. The 13-month timeline here is tighter, but the labour market is restructuring NOW: 45,363 confirmed global tech layoffs in Q1 2026, with one in five citing AI and automation 4. Whether policy recommendations arriving in mid-2027 can shape a transition already underway is the question the bill's structure cannot answer.
