
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Over the last few years, the technological promise of artificial intelligence (AI) has propelled stock market gains, driven fears of widespread labor market displacement, and helped turn microchip production into a matter of national security. Generative AI models are still in their infancy, but investors and economists are already debating whether its impact will rival that of electricity or the steam engine. There are nonetheless numerous hurdles to overcome before it becomes dispersed throughout the entire economy. In this episode, we talk with Will Rinehart, Resident Senior Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute’s Center for Technology, Science, and Energy, about the trajectory of AI development, its likelihood of becoming a generational disruptive technology, and how it could help narrow the federal deficit.
By Will Compernolle5
2020 ratings
Over the last few years, the technological promise of artificial intelligence (AI) has propelled stock market gains, driven fears of widespread labor market displacement, and helped turn microchip production into a matter of national security. Generative AI models are still in their infancy, but investors and economists are already debating whether its impact will rival that of electricity or the steam engine. There are nonetheless numerous hurdles to overcome before it becomes dispersed throughout the entire economy. In this episode, we talk with Will Rinehart, Resident Senior Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute’s Center for Technology, Science, and Energy, about the trajectory of AI development, its likelihood of becoming a generational disruptive technology, and how it could help narrow the federal deficit.

32,100 Listeners

30,666 Listeners

8,776 Listeners

3,075 Listeners

4,345 Listeners

2,201 Listeners

1,967 Listeners

5,461 Listeners

2,035 Listeners

9,532 Listeners

294 Listeners

10,182 Listeners

324 Listeners

271 Listeners

153 Listeners