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Don’t fear the singularity

Don’t fear the singularity
Technology is moving up the skill curve. As AI becomes more ‘I’, how far can it go? Invesco partnered with The Economist to explore the topic in more depth in their ‘The art of the possible’ series.

You can look at the revolution in artificial intelligence (AI) in two ways—as two alternate universes, almost. One, where machines support and enhance the human. Star Trek, if you will. The other, where access to technology has created an impassable divide between the haves and have-nots, more like the dystopian film Elysium.

Technology is certainly taking us closer to an automated future, whatever that may be. AI may have started by replacing low-skilled call centre jobs with rather clunky bots, but things are becoming more sophisticated.

Take the field of medicine, for example. To qualify as a diagnostician takes people years of training, and is often an arduous, time-consuming process. What’s more, in many areas, demand for this expertise outstrips supply, putting the healthcare system under strain. But where diagnostic information can be digitised, machines can step in to take the load. "AI is being used to help solve complex societal challenges, such as climate change, healthcare and food poverty," says Robert Troy, Ireland’s minister for trade promotion, digital and company regulation. The advantage of an algorithm is that it can draw conclusions from the data in a fraction of a second. And, unlike a flesh-and-blood expert, machine-learning expertise can be reproduced potentially infinitely.

AI is being used to help solve complex societal challenges, such as climate change, healthcare and food poverty.

Robert Troy, Ireland’s minister for trade promotion, digital and company regulation

Mr Troy is optimistic about the wider ability of AI to transform society. "Globally, it is estimated that the application of AI could double economic growth by 2035," he says. One study estimates that AI could contribute up to $15.7trn globally in 2030, more than the current output of China and India combined.1

Kevin Roose, author of Futureproof: 9 Rules for Humans in the Age of Automation, highlights the ways that AI is shaping work, such as "labour displacement that we traditionally think of when we think about automation", although he says this is happening in a broader swath of industries than it traditionally has, through to white-collar workplaces. What’s less recognised is the supplanting of management functions: "There’s now a whole industry of worker surveillance and performance tracking software, and in some cases automatically making decisions about hiring and firing." Overall, this could lead to the replacement of 47% of current job functions by 2034.2

Data curators

Where does this leave work, as we traditionally conceive it? Two centuries ago, England’s Luddites destroyed the emergent machinery of the first industrial revolution, as a way of combating what they saw as the replacement of manual jobs. Are human workers becoming a thing of the past?

Not really, says Mr Troy, as "much of the disruption caused by AI will result in changes to job roles, tasks and distribution". Your doctor, for instance, won’t necessarily be replaced by a robot. "AI-based systems will augment physicians and are unlikely to replace the traditional physician–patient relationship," according to one recent study published in PeerJ.

Marcus du Sautoy, Oxford Simonyi Professor for the Public Understanding of Science, agrees with Mr Troy: "We are going to see AI encroach on an increasing number of white-collar jobs, but as with all these revolutions, new jobs appear."

Global private investment in AI by focus area (total investment, millions US$)
Global private investment in AI by focus area (total investment, millions US$)
Source: CapIQ, Crunchbase & Netbase Quid, 2020

The abilities of machines can enhance what it means to be human, not constrain it. Professor du Sautoy gives the example of the data curator, calling it "almost a new type of artist". "Algorithms learn from data," he says. "You give it data, it will go in one direction, you give it different data, it goes in another." The still central role of human agency is to understand that process, and how to manipulate it to make it do what you want it to do—something that is a new and very human skill set. So, although AI can mimic artistic styles, from poetry to painting, it functions mostly in an assistant role, rather than replacing the human genius in the loop. The ghost in the machine has yet to become the machine.

We thought the one thing that will be left to do is to write our symphonies and our novels, and now AI is going to be able to do that as well.

Marcus du Sautoy, Simonyi Professor for the Public Understanding of Science, University of Oxford

Says Professor du Sautoy: "We thought the one thing that will be left to do is to write our symphonies and our novels, and now AI is going to be able to do that as well." He sees a positive aspect to this, as the imperative to be creative can be terrifying. It’s a high entry level to taking that leap into writing or painting. "There’s something quite exciting about the power of these tools to democratise something that before was quite an elitist activity," he adds. AI banishes the terror of the blank page. It’s an interesting idea.

Towards a two-tier economy?

Mr Roose predicts the rise of a two-tier economy: the machine economy and the human economy. The products of the former will become very cheap. "AI will enable the people who run those companies to strip out all the inefficiency and waste," he says.

Conversely, the human economy will consist of people who are not so much making things and providing services as they are creating feelings and experiences, examples being healthcare workers, teachers and artists. And why stop there? Even people you wouldn’t think of as being irreplaceable, such as bartenders, baristas and flight attendants, fit the bill because they’re about making people feel comfortable. It’s the human touch that is so important.

Mr Roose reckons that this will increasingly see hyper-scale tech companies create higher-touch versions of their services: for example, a luxury version of Netflix, where film curators pick out movies for you. "There will be layers within these companies where users pay for human interaction on top of the base layer," says Mr Roose. He predicts a new generation of companies that scale human connection without dehumanising it.

Does this mean that the tech leviathans will dominate everything? Professor du Sautoy doesn’t think so—but he does believe changes need to be made to ensure an open field. "You don’t need huge companies to analyse this data," he says. "It’s about having clever algorithms to search data allowing smaller players to come into the field."

However, he cautions, "If you don’t have access to data, you’re completely stuffed, frankly." There are already examples of this in open source data—for instance, open banking regulation, which compels large banks to share their customer financial information. This has enabled disruptors in fintech, such as UK challenger banks Starling and Monzo, each now valued at more than £1bn, to enter the playing field.

There are, of course, strong vested interests with this. But that’s also true of ‘traditional’ financial services, and yet the field was still opened. Could the same be done with AI?

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