Nicholas Bloom | The Impact of AI on Productivity

Date

Tuesday, Mar 24, 2026

Time

10:00 a.m. PT

Location

San Francisco, CA

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Summary

Nicholas Bloom, the William D. Eberle professor of economics at Stanford University, delivered a live presentation on the productivity economics of AI on March 24, 2026.

Professor Bloom explored AI use at the firm level and its impacts on employment and productivity using new research from surveys of over 5,000 CFOs, CEOs, and executives across the US, UK, Germany, and Australia.

Following his presentation, Professor Bloom answered live and pre-submitted questions with our host moderator, Huiyu Li, co-head of the EmergingTech Economic Research Network (EERN) and research advisor at the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco.

This was a virtual event hosted by the EmergingTech Economic Research Network (EERN). You can view the full recording on this page.

Key Takeaways

What makes AI adoption uniquely fast compared to prior advances in technology?

“In 1994, when I started work, I was given a share of a computer and it had an internet connection … I didn’t have the internet at home. Most technologies like this started at the workplace because they were just too expensive. Typical people didn’t have this stuff at home when it came out. AI is a bit unusual … more people are using AI outside their job than inside their job, which is another reason why adoption will be potentially quite fast, because in the workplace people are very familiar with it.”

Skip to 7:50 in the video for the full response.

What is AI’s impact on productivity?

“Over the last three years, we just have not seen, on average, a big effect on productivity [from AI], … when you look forward, things are going to look different. … American companies are reporting a 2.25% increase in productivity over the next three years, which is three-quarters of a percent a year. … Productivity growth now is slowing to about one to one and a half percent a year. So, adding three-quarters of a percent will be roughly adding 50 to 100% onto baseline. This is an enormous number.”

Skip to 20:47 in the video for the full response.

How do firms and employees expect AI to affect employment?

“[U.S. companies] are predicting in their own companies a 1.2% reduction in employment over the next three years. The US labor market is about 180 million, this is roughly two million employees … nothing in comparison to the scale of the US labor markets. … So, unemployment, at least in the next three years, I just do not see a big aggregate effect. … What do employees say? … They’re net positive on employment rather than negative, the average American employee thinks [AI] is going to boost employment.”

Skip to 24:42 in the video for the full response.

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