Nobel Economist Warns AI Hype Overblown as 'Maintenance' Book Argues for Radical Fixing
Nobel Prize-winning economist Daron Acemoglu has dismissed claims that artificial intelligence will revolutionize productivity, warning that the technology's impact remains modest and will not eliminate the need for human workers. His views, published months before he won the 2024 Nobel in economics, have not gained traction in Silicon Valley as AI advances accelerate.
Separately, tech legend Stewart Brand has released a new book arguing that maintenance—of objects, infrastructure, and the planet—is a radical, civilizational act that deserves greater recognition. Brand's work offers a counterpoint to the tech industry's focus on disruption, emphasizing the importance of care and repair.
Background
Acemoglu's paper, released earlier this year, used historical data and economic modeling to predict that AI would boost U.S. GDP by only 0.5% over a decade. He also concluded that AI would not significantly replace humans in most jobs, contradicting claims from tech leaders that the technology will unleash unprecedented growth.

In an interview with MIT Technology Review, Acemoglu said: The latest developments—including advanced chatbots and coding assistants—do not change my core thesis. The bottlenecks to AI adoption remain huge, and businesses are still struggling to integrate these tools effectively.
His view underscores ongoing debate about AI's actual economic impact.
Meanwhile, Brand's book Maintenance: Of Everything, Part One celebrates the unsung heroes who keep systems running. Lee Vinsel, a Virginia Tech professor who reviewed the book, notes: Brand argues that maintainers haven't gotten the laurels they deserve—and he's right. Yet his vision often feels solitary, more about personal fulfillment than sharing the work.

What This Means
The juxtaposition of Acemoglu's caution and Brand's call for maintenance highlights a tension in today's tech culture: the rush for breakthrough innovation versus the need for steady, ongoing care. Acemoglu's data-driven skepticism challenges investors and policymakers who bet big on AI's transformative power.
Brand's book offers a human-centered alternative: fixing things, from motorcycles to ecosystems, can be both personally rewarding and socially essential. For technologists, these stories serve as a reminder that progress is not just about building new, but about preserving and improving what exists.
As AI adoption accelerates, industries face a choice. They can follow Silicon Valley's narrative of disruption, or embrace a more measured approach that values maintenance and supports human workers through transitions. Acemoglu's research suggests the latter is more realistic.
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