--- type: divergence title: "Does AI substitute for human labor or complement it — and at what phase does the pattern shift?" domain: ai-alignment secondary_domains: [internet-finance, teleological-economics] description: "Determines whether AI displacement is a near-term employment crisis or a productivity boom with delayed substitution — the answer shapes investment timing, policy response, and the urgency of coordination mechanisms" status: open claims: - "economic forces push humans out of every cognitive loop where output quality is independently verifiable because human-in-the-loop is a cost that competitive markets eliminate.md" - "early AI adoption increases firm productivity without reducing employment suggesting capital deepening not labor replacement as the dominant mechanism.md" - "micro displacement evidence does not imply macro economic crisis because structural shock absorbers exist between job-level disruption and economy-wide collapse.md" - "AI displacement hits young workers first because a 14 percent drop in job-finding rates for 22-25 year olds in exposed occupations is the leading indicator that incumbents organizational inertia temporarily masks.md" surfaced_by: leo created: 2026-03-19 --- # Does AI substitute for human labor or complement it — and at what phase does the pattern shift? This is the central empirical question behind the AI displacement thesis. The KB currently holds claims that predict opposite near-term outcomes from the same technological change, each backed by real data. The economic logic claim argues that competitive markets systematically eliminate human oversight wherever output quality is independently verifiable — code review, ad copy, diagnostic imaging. The mechanism is cost: human-in-the-loop is an expense that rational firms cut when AI output is measurable. The complementarity claim points to EU firm-level data (Aldasoro et al., BIS) showing ~4% productivity gains with no employment reduction. The pattern is capital deepening — firms use AI to augment existing workers, not replace them. The macro shock absorber claim argues that even where job-level displacement occurs, structural buffers (savings, labor mobility, new job creation) prevent economy-wide crisis. The young worker displacement claim provides the leading indicator: a 14% drop in job-finding rates for 22-25 year olds in AI-exposed occupations, suggesting substitution IS happening but concentrated where organizational inertia is lowest. ## Divergent Claims ### Economic forces push humans out of verifiable cognitive loops **File:** [[economic forces push humans out of every cognitive loop where output quality is independently verifiable because human-in-the-loop is a cost that competitive markets eliminate]] **Core argument:** Markets systematically eliminate human oversight wherever AI output is measurable. This is structural, not cyclical. **Strongest evidence:** Documented removal of human code review, A/B tested preference for AI ad copy, economic logic of cost elimination in competitive markets. ### Early AI adoption increases productivity without reducing employment **File:** [[early AI adoption increases firm productivity without reducing employment suggesting capital deepening not labor replacement as the dominant mechanism]] **Core argument:** Firm-level EU data shows AI adoption correlates with productivity gains AND stable employment. Capital deepening dominates. **Strongest evidence:** Aldasoro et al. (BIS study), EU firm-level data across multiple sectors. ### Macro shock absorbers prevent economy-wide crisis **File:** [[micro displacement evidence does not imply macro economic crisis because structural shock absorbers exist between job-level disruption and economy-wide collapse]] **Core argument:** Job-level displacement doesn't automatically translate to macro crisis because savings buffers, labor mobility, and new job creation absorb shocks. **Strongest evidence:** Historical automation waves; structural analysis of transmission mechanisms. ### Young workers are the leading displacement indicator **File:** [[AI displacement hits young workers first because a 14 percent drop in job-finding rates for 22-25 year olds in exposed occupations is the leading indicator that incumbents organizational inertia temporarily masks]] **Core argument:** Substitution IS happening, but concentrated where organizational inertia is lowest — new hires, not incumbent workers. **Strongest evidence:** 14% drop in job-finding rates for 22-25 year olds in AI-exposed occupations. ## What Would Resolve This - **Longitudinal firm tracking:** Do firms that adopted AI early show employment reductions 2-3 years later, or does the capital deepening pattern persist? - **Capability threshold testing:** Is there a measurable AI capability level above which substitution activates in previously complementary domains? - **Sector-specific data:** Which industries show substitution first? Is "output quality independently verifiable" the actual discriminant? - **Young worker trajectory:** Does the 14% job-finding drop for 22-25 year olds propagate to older cohorts, or does it stabilize as a generational adjustment? ## Cascade Impact - If substitution dominates: Leo's grand strategy beliefs about coordination urgency strengthen. Vida's healthcare displacement claims gain weight. Investment thesis shifts toward AI-native companies. - If complementarity persists: The displacement narrative is premature. Policy interventions are less urgent. Investment focus shifts to augmentation tools. - If phase-dependent: Both sides are right at different times. The critical question becomes timing — when does the phase transition occur? --- Relevant Notes: - [[white-collar displacement has lagged but deeper consumption impact than blue-collar because top-decile earners drive disproportionate consumer spending and their savings buffers mask the damage for quarters]] — the consumption channel - [[the gap between theoretical AI capability and observed deployment is massive across all occupations because adoption lag not capability limits determines real-world impact]] — adoption lag as mediating variable Topics: - [[_map]]