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"Happiness can be defined, in part at least, as the fruit of the desire and ability to sacrifice what we want now for what we want eventually" - Stephen Covey

Saturday, February 14, 2026

Newspaper Summary 150226

 Based on the sources provided, here is the reproduction of the article regarding the challenges faced by stock investors in the current market.

‘Needle hunting’ starts pricking stock investors

MARKET REALITY. Winners still exist, but the odds changed, with only 26% beating the Nifty 500 TRI in the last one year period

By Kumar Shankar Roy

Index fund pioneer John Bogle’s famous line about buying the haystack, instead of hunting for the needle, feels like a cliché in bull markets. But in the last 12 months or so, stock investors searching for the needle felt the prick as the odds flipped in Dalal Street. Sure the benchmark Nifty 500 TRI rose a respectable 12.57 per cent. Yet, only 26 per cent of stocks beat it, with just 39 per cent churning out a positive gain, and the average stock return slipping into negative territory for the first time in at least half a decade.

A study of all NSE-listed stocks in a fixed universe of 1,494 names across 5-yearly blocks shows how investing in stocks has become unforgiving in recent times. Contrast this to the 2021 period when stock picking looked like a "hobby between lunch and a broking app login". Seven in ten stocks beat the index in that period, and over eight in ten stocks clocked positive returns. Those were times an investor could be directionally right without being particularly precise.

Fast forward to the twelve months ended February 13, 2026, and underperformance has gone mainstream. Excitement got expensive as investors went down the market capitalisation ladder.

  • Large-caps: 60 per cent of scrips, including RIL, Bharti Airtel, and SBI, beat the Nifty 500 TRI.
  • Mid-caps: The hit rate fell to 50 per cent from 68 per cent in the previous year, though stocks like Marico, HPCL, BHEL, and Aditya Birla Capital still outperformed.
  • Small-caps: This segment turned into a "veritable graveyard," with only 20.5 per cent of stocks beating the benchmark.

Multi-baggers have thinned out sharply, and most stocks now cluster in modest-return or loss buckets. Today’s market brings richer valuations, tighter global liquidity, FPI outflows, a weaker rupee, and fresh AI anxiety for sectors like tech services.

SHRINKING BREADTH

The hit rate for beating the Nifty 500 TRI has plunged from 69 per cent (Feb 2021–Feb 2022) to just 26 per cent in the latest twelve-month period. Similarly, the percentage of stocks in the black has dropped from 90 per cent in the year to February 2023 to only 39 per cent in the year to February 2026. While the index remains up, individual stock portfolios often feel like they belong among the worst-performing markets globally.

The sector split highlights these challenges:

  • IT-software: Only 11 per cent of stocks outperformed the index; none of the top 10 (like TCS or Infosys) beat it.
  • Chemicals & Textiles: Hit rates were near 12 per cent and less than 10 per cent, respectively.
  • Banks & Auto Ancillaries: These remained pockets of strength, with benchmark-beating rates of 70.6 per cent and 54.4 per cent, respectively.

KNOW YOUR EDGE

When market breadth shrinks, big winners often merely "decorate social media" rather than rescue entire portfolios. Former PIMCO CEO Mohamed El Erian offers retail traders a blunt test: If you cannot explain your edge over the crowd, you are not buying a stock; you are buying a lottery ticket.

In this environment, Bogle’s "haystack logic" stops sounding boring. Preferring the index over an individual stock where you have not performed due diligence is not laziness—it is arithmetic.


Based on the sources provided, here is the reproduction of the article regarding the challenges faced by stock investors in the current market.

Based on the sources provided, here is the reproduction of the article regarding the role and performance of Multi-Asset Allocation Funds (MAAFs).

Balance beats bravado when cycles turn

ALL WEATHER. We address two key questions — Where do all-in-one Multi-Asset Allocation Funds fit in diversified portfolios, and which one suits your goals and risk profile?

By Dhuraivel Gunasekaran, bl. research bureau

While Indian equity markets swung between peaks and troughs over the past two years, gold and silver glittered and scaled record highs. One mutual fund category, Multi-Asset Allocation Funds (MAAFs), turned this divergence to its advantage, delivering a compelling 16 per cent CAGR during this period. This outperformed hybrid peers, market-cap-oriented equity funds, and broader benchmarks, attracting nearly ₹93,000 crore in net inflows over two years.

WHAT ARE MAAFs?

MAAFs are hybrid mutual funds that invest in at least three asset classes—typically equities, debt, and commodities—with a minimum 10 per cent allocation to each. Currently, 44 schemes operate under this mandate, though they follow widely differing asset-allocation strategies and risk profiles. Following regulatory changes in February 2025, these funds are broadly classified into three categories:

  • Active MAAFs: Rely on dynamic, model, and manager-driven tactical allocation.
  • Multi-Asset Passive FoFs: Invest in a basket of passive index funds and ETFs across asset classes.
  • Multi-Asset Omni FoFs: Combine both passive and active fund structures.

PERFORMANCE AND RESILIENCE

To evaluate their core capability, it is useful to look at performance before the precious metals rally. Between June 2018 and June 2024, MAAFs with over 65 per cent equity exposure delivered an average CAGR of 18 per cent, matching the Nifty 50 Total Return Index.

MAAFs have also shown significant resilience during downturns.

  • 2020 Covid Crash: These funds declined by an average of 26 per cent, while the Nifty 50 TRI fell by 38 per cent.
  • September 2024–March 2025 Correction: They fell around 8 per cent, compared to a 15 per cent decline in the index.

TAXATION AND SUITABILITY

From a taxation perspective, MAAFs fall into two buckets:

  1. Active MAAFs (65%+ domestic equities): Qualify for equity taxation (20% short-term, 12.5% long-term capital gains).
  2. Sub-65% Equity/FoFs: Taxed as "other-than-specified" schemes, where short-term gains (under 24 months) are taxed at slab rates, and long-term gains are taxed at 12.5% without indexation.

WHAT SHOULD INVESTORS DO?

For investors who lack the time or discipline to rebalance their own portfolios, a MAAF serves as a convenient core holding. However, a wrong choice can distort a portfolio's risk profile.

  • Investors seeking equity-like returns: Should consider 65%+ equity MAAFs such as those from ICICI Prudential, quant, and HDFC.
  • Investors seeking downside cushioning: May prefer sub-65% equity options like Nippon India, SBI, and UTI Multi Asset Allocation Funds.

As hedge fund legend Ray Dalio noted, "You should have a strategic asset allocation mix that assumes that you don't know what the future is going to hold".


Based on the sources provided, here is the reproduction of the article regarding the new Consumer Price Index (CPI) series and its impact on financial planning.

CPI new series & your retirement math

MONEY WISE. CPI 2024 is a better mirror of today’s spending and today’s price world. It changes the measuring tape, not the actual prices or your interest rate.

By Kumar Shankar Roy, bl. research bureau

In a dialogue between two colleagues, Sanket and Suman, the implications of the government’s decision to rebuild the Consumer Price Index (CPI) are decoded. The government has updated the shopping basket and reset the baseline year from 2012 to 2024.

Understanding the Change

CPI acts as a monthly household bill scorecard, tracking the cost of a fixed basket of common goods and services. The base year serves as a starting ruler set at 100; for instance, the CPI general for January 2026 stood at 104.46 compared to 101.67 in January 2025, implying a 2.75 per cent inflation rate.

The base was updated because spending habits have shifted significantly since 2012, with more emphasis on services and digital purchases. This update utilized the 2023-24 Household Consumption Expenditure Survey (HCES) to capture modern spending across rural and urban India.

Expanded Tracking and Collection

The new series, CPI 2024, has significantly expanded its reach:

  • Market Coverage: It covers 1,465 rural markets and 1,395 urban markets across 434 towns.
  • E-commerce: It adds 12 online markets in 12 major cities to capture digital prices.
  • Modernization: Price collection has moved from paper to tablets using Computer Assisted Personal Interviewing (CAPI).
  • New Inclusions: For the first time, rural house rent is included in the index.

Impact on Investors and Retirement

For retail investors, the new series affects how inflation is read, how real returns are computed, and how long-range planning is conducted.

Real return is what remains from earnings after subtracting inflation. If a Fixed Deposit (FD) offers a 7 per cent nominal interest and inflation is 3 per cent, the real return is 4 per cent. In retirement planning, even a small shift in assumed inflation changes the required corpus, equity allocation comfort, and the sustainable withdrawal path.

Suman suggests using CPI as a general guide but warns that households often face higher personal inflation in health and education than the headline figure. Therefore, separate assumptions should be maintained for these major expenses.

Shifting Basket Weights

The weightage of items within the basket has changed:

  • Food: Has become less dominant than before.
  • Services: Housing, transport, health, communication, and personal services have gained importance.
  • Sensitivity: Because food weight is lower, a spike in food prices has slightly less pull on the overall headline inflation than it once did.

For example, in January 2026, while silver jewellery jumped 159.67 per cent and tomatoes rose 64.80 per cent, these spikes had a limited impact on the headline number because their individual CPI weights are small.

Practical Takeaways

  1. Update Spreadsheets: Investors should transition to using CPI 2024 for tracking current inflation.
  2. Use Inflation Ranges: Instead of a single number, use a range for financial goals and stress test plans for higher inflation scenarios, particularly for healthcare.
  3. Indirect Effects: While the new CPI doesn't mechanically change interest rates or taxes, it influences market expectations, bond yields, and policy decisions over time.

Based on the sources provided, here is the reproduction of the article regarding the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) likely policy path through 2026.

‘RBI likely to be on a pause through 2026’

EXPERT TALK. No need for the RBI to give further growth impulse, says Axis MF’s Head of Fixed Income Devang Shah

By Lokeshwarri SK

In an exclusive interaction with businessline, Devang Shah, Head-Fixed Income, Axis Mutual Fund, discusses RBI’s policy rate action, demand-supply dynamics in the G-sec market, and the way forward for fixed-income investors.

The Current Rate Cycle

The RBI cut 125 basis points between February and December last year. Do you think that the current rate cycle has come to an end?

As you rightly summed up, RBI has taken a lot of monetary policy action in the last 12 months and they have been very supportive to the growth agenda. We also need to keep in mind that there has been more than ₹18-lakh crore of liquidity infusion in the last 12 months through various actions like OMOs, CRR cuts, and FX swaps.

The Budget has been quite supportive for growth, with a significant increase in spending on capital investment and major schemes. Therefore, the RBI need not worry about giving any further growth impulse. Additionally, the trade deal with the US is good news; without it, growth in the second half of 2026 could have been weaker.

We believe that growth can be in the 6.75 to 7 per cent band for FY27. While there may be an uptick in inflation in the second half of the year, it is not expected to exceed 4.75 per cent for the full year. In this context, I think RBI can stay on a pause for most of this year. A rate increase in the second half of the year would only be considered if there is a bad monsoon or a significant inflation spike, though I assign a very low probability to that.

Market Borrowing and Yields

What is your view on the gross market borrowing of ₹17.2-lakh crore in the Budget? Does the market have the capability to absorb the supply?

The Budget numbers seem quite conservative regarding tax revenue and nominal GDP. However, the gross borrowing of ₹17.25-lakh crore is slightly higher than our estimates of ₹16.5 to ₹16.75-lakh crore. We believe there is a demand-supply gap of close to ₹2–2.5-lakh crore, even after assuming ₹4–5-lakh crore of OMOs by the RBI. The inclusion of Indian bonds in the Bloomberg active global aggregator index could help bridge this gap by fetching roughly $25 billion of flows.

What is the range that the 10-year bond yield can move in the next year or so?

We see the 10-year yield in the 6.60–6.80 band from January to March 2026. If the RBI disappoints on OMOs, yields might inch up toward 6.80–7 per cent from April onwards. For the full year, the band will likely stay between 6.75 to 7 for the most part.

Global Context and Investor Advice

What is your view on global bond yields? Does the hardening of US yields affect domestic yields as well?

The correlation is to a large extent broken between US bonds and Indian bonds. For instance, since 2022, US treasury yields rose from 2 per cent to 4.25 per cent, while Indian 10-year yields actually fell from 7.5 per cent to 6.75 per cent. Global central bankers are likely on a pause now after significant rate easing over the last 12–18 months.

What is your advice for fixed-income investors?

In 2026, the RBI will be on a pause for the most part of the year. It will be good for investors to stick to the short end of the curve and buy 1–2-year AAA corporate bonds, which are available at significantly higher yields.

Retail investors can also look at gilt funds with higher allocations to State government securities, as there is a significant rise in spreads for State development loans. For medium-term investors (up to two years), income plus arbitrage fund of funds is a very good category, as they are taxed like equity funds if you stay invested for two years.


PROFILE: Devang Shah Devang Shah, Head of Fixed Income at Axis Mutual Fund, joined Axis AMC in 2012. With over 20 years of industry experience, he manages fixed-income strategies with a focus on risk and yield optimization.


Based on the sources provided, here is the reproduction of the article regarding Sun Pharma’s performance and outlook.

Betting on launched assets and pipeline

PHARMACEUTICALS. New launches, strong portfolio and pipeline support the stock amidst volatile equity markets

By Sai Prabhakar Yadavalli, bl. research bureau

Sun Pharma: ACCUMULATE ON DIPS Current Market Price: ₹1,698.10

WHY

  • Two recent launches in US with one more expected in one year.
  • Strong India performance should benefit from generic Semaglutide launch.
  • Modest premium in valuations supported by increasing innovative medicine contribution.

With two innovative medicine launches underway in the US and a third expected in the next one year along with generic Semaglutide launch in India, Sun Pharma is positioned well across geographic segments. The company has gradually strengthened its innovative portfolio, which now accounts for 25 per cent of Q3FY26 sales. This has supported an EBITDA margin expansion of 450 basis points in the last five years. With a pipeline of assets, the segment should support the improved margin profile, cash-flow prospects and pricing power, compared to Indian peers.

This is captured in the valuations at 31 times one-year forward earnings compared to Nifty Pharma or Sun Pharma’s own last five-year average at 28.5 times. In January 2025, it was recommended that investors accumulate the stock; since then, the stock has returned -4 per cent. For long-term investors, the stock can add value as a defensive stock as part of a diversified portfolio. One potential risk is from tariff announcements by the US on innovative medicine.

INNOVATIVE MEDICINE

The company has renamed its specialty segment to Global Innovative Medicines, reflecting revenues from patented medicines rather than generics. The segment, with more than $1 billion in annual revenues and a Q3FY26 exit growth rate of 13.3 per cent year on year, is now a mature, self-sustained value generator.

The leading asset, Ilumya (for plaque psoriasis), reported sales of $680 million in FY25 globally. Sun Pharma has applied for a supplemental application in Psoriatic Arthritis, with a launch expected in the next year. Two more US products launched in the last year include:

  • Leqselvi (deuruxolitinib): Launched in July 2025 for severe alopecia areata.
  • Unloxcyt (cosibelimab): Launched in January 2026 for advanced Cutaneous Squamous Cell Carcinoma (aCSCC), adding a checkpoint inhibitor to the portfolio.

Pipeline assets include Fibromun (in Phase-II and Phase-III trials for glioblastoma and soft tissue sarcoma) and GL0034 (in early trials for type-2 diabetes). With close to $3 billion in cash, Sun Pharma can also look for strategic acquisitions.

INDIA AND OTHERS

Sun Pharma is the industry leader in the Indian pharma market, growing faster than the industry at a 13 per cent CAGR in FY21-25. It is the leader in the diabetes segment in India and will participate in the first wave of launches for generic Semaglutide, having secured approvals for both weight loss and diabetes brands.

The Rest of the World and Emerging Markets accounted for 34 per cent of 9MFY26 revenues, reporting growth of 17–20 per cent. Ilumya has now been launched in 35 countries.

FINANCIAL OUTLOOK

Gross and EBITDA margins have expanded, benefiting from the innovative medicine mix. Revenue growth stood at 11 per cent in 9MFY26. Margin expansion may face temporary headwinds in the next year due to launch costs of approximately $100 million for two new products. Consensus estimates place revenue and earnings growth at 11 per cent and 12 per cent, respectively, in FY27.


Based on the sources provided, here is the reproduction of the article regarding the outlook for benchmark stock indices.

Short fall

INDEX OUTLOOK. The benchmark indices can dip more to test supports and reverse higher eventually

By Gurumurthy K, bl. research bureau

Nifty 50, Sensex and Nifty Bank index did not see a strong follow-through rise after opening last week on a positive note. Sensex and Nifty fell sharply towards the end of the week, giving away all their gains and closing down 1.14 per cent and 0.87 per cent, respectively. The Nifty Bank index also fell but managed to close the week marginally higher by 0.11 per cent.

On the charts, the near-term picture looks weak, and indices can fall more this week. However, supports are expected to limit the downside and act as a floor for a potential reversal higher. Positive sentiment is bolstered by Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPIs), who bought Indian equities for the second consecutive week with a net inflow of about $1.27 billion.

NIFTY 50 (25,471.10)

  • Short-term view: Immediate supports are at 25,200 and 25,100. Nifty is expected to reverse higher from this zone toward 26,000–26,100 and potentially 26,400. A break below 25,100 could extend the fall to 24,700 or 24,400.
  • Medium-term view: The broader picture remains bullish with strong support between 23,500 and 24,000. The index can target 27,500–28,000 in the medium term, with long-term potential for 30,000–31,000. This view would be negated only if the index falls below 23,500.

NIFTY BANK (60,186.65)

  • Short-term view: The near-term picture is unclear. Key supports lie at 60,000 and the 59,750–59,550 zone. A bounce from here could lead the index back to 61,000. A breach of 61,000 is necessary to open the upside for 62,000 and higher levels.
  • Medium-term view: Sideways consolidation within a broader uptrend continues. A bullish breakout above 61,000 eventually could target 63,000–63,500 initially and 68,000–69,000 in the long term. Support at 53,500 is crucial to maintain this outlook.

SENSEX (82,626.76)

  • Short-term view: Supports are at 82,450 and 82,000. As long as Sensex stays above 82,000, a bounce back to 84,500–85,000 and a revisit of 86,000 is possible. A fall beyond 80,000 is not currently expected.
  • Medium-term view: The broader uptrend is intact with targets of 89,000–90,000 (medium term) and 98,000–99,000 (long term). The bullish view is negated only if the index breaks the 79,500 support.

MIDCAP AND SMALLCAP OUTLOOK

  • Nifty Midcap 150 (21,884.35): Near-term support is at 21,500; a bounce could reach 22,800. A break above 22,800 would clear the path for 26,000–26,500 in the medium term. Crucial supports are at 20,500 and 20,000.
  • Nifty Smallcap 250 (15,988.30): Support is at 15,850. A bounce could target 16,600–16,700 in a week or two, and eventually 18,300. A break above 18,300 could take the index to 22,500–23,000 in the long term. The sources reiterate that this remains a good time to enter the small-cap segment, provided the index stays above 15,000.

IMMEDIATE SUPPORTS

  • Nifty 50: 25,200, 25,100
  • Sensex: 82,450, 82,000
  • Nifty Bank: 59,750–59,550

Based on the sources provided, here is the reproduction of the article regarding the upcoming changes and features in EPFO 3.0.

What’s new in EPFO 3.0?

PF-WISE. The new app would enable withdrawal of proceeds from bank ATMs, and use of UPI interface.

By Venkatasubramanian K, bl. research bureau

Oftentimes, we hear many subscribers of the Employees’ Provident Fund (EPF) expressing dissatisfaction about the delay or denial of rightful claims. From portal glitches to the non-receipt of OTPs and non-updation of passbooks, the list of grievances is long.

However, change is on the horizon. The Labour Minister announced in December 2025 that a new EPFO 3.0 app would be rolled out early in 2026, with recent reports indicating it should be up and running by April 2026.

NEW APP, NEW FEATURES

EPFO 3.0 is not an upgrade but an entirely new app dedicated to EPF transactions. While the Umang app and UAN portal will continue to function for now, the new app is designed for easier navigation and more comprehensive detail capture.

Key features include:

  • ATM Withdrawals: The EPFO will provide ATM cards linked to EPF accounts upon application. Approved claim funds will be released to the linked bank account and can be withdrawn from designated ATMs.
  • UPI Interface: Withdrawals can also be conducted via linked UPI accounts at ATMs.
  • Self-Service Transactions: Subscribers can correct information, upload KYC documents, and modify bank or personal details themselves via OTP authentication on their mobile devices.
  • No Employer Intervention: Most updates and transactions will no longer require authentication from the employer.
  • Faster Approvals: Claim approval timelines are expected to drop from a few weeks to just a few days.

ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA

To use these new features, subscribers must meet three criteria:

  1. An active UAN (Universal Account Number).
  2. An active mobile number linked to the UAN.
  3. A KYC-compliant account, which requires Aadhaar, PAN, a passport-size photograph, and bank details. Subscribers must upload scanned cheque leaves as part of this online process.

REDUCED TIMELINES & STANDARDIZATION

In October 2025, the EPFO’s central board of trustees (CBT) approved several reforms to simplify the framework.

  • Merged Framework: As many as 13 types of partial withdrawal provisions have been merged into one simplified framework.
  • Reduced Subscription Period: You can now make withdrawals for all purposes (medical, education, marriage, etc.) after only 12 months of contributions. Previously, these required between three and seven years depending on the purpose.
  • Higher Withdrawal Limits: The withdrawal amount is now standardized at up to 75 per cent of the accumulated EPF corpus (including employer and employee contributions plus interest).

UNEMPLOYMENT BENEFITS

If a subscriber is rendered unemployed due to involuntary attrition or other reasons, they can now withdraw 75 per cent of their corpus immediately. The remaining 25 per cent can be withdrawn after one year if they remain unemployed.

PLAN WISELY

While withdrawals are easier, the Labour Ministry notes that about 75 per cent of subscribers had less than ₹50,000 at the time of final settlement. Experts advise subscribers to treat the EPF as a retirement kitty with its 8.25 per cent annual assured returns, rather than using it for every contingency. Instead, investors should maintain a separate emergency corpus and insurance for risks.


OVERVIEW

  • Simple to log into
  • Standardised procedures
  • Higher withdrawals

Based on the source provided, there is no standalone article titled "Emerging Tech Redefining What it Takes to Scale Globally."

Instead, this phrase appears within the column "AI Will Usher a Golden Age of Dum Pukht" by Indrajit Hazra. The author mentions it as a pitch for a paper he presented to the organizers of the "AI Impact Summit" in Delhi, which was ultimately rejected for being "too niche".

Below is the reproduction of the section of that article where the author discusses this concept and what his presentation would have entailed:

From "AI Will Usher a Golden Age of Dum Pukht"

By Indrajit Hazra

Hazra describes his attempt to engage with the upcoming AI Impact Summit:

"Which is what happened to me when, earlier this week, I approached organisers of AI Impact Summit that kicks off in Delhi tomorrow. Coming from a non-tech background, my pitch for a paper on how emerging tech is redefining what it takes to scale globally was considered too niche and 'Get out of here' ridiculous".

Despite the rejection, Hazra outlines the core of the presentation he would have given to India's business leaders regarding the transition from traditional methods to an AI-driven global scale:

  • The Paradigm Shift: He likens current human intelligence to "Cro-Magnons at the entrance" of a new era.
  • A New Way to Scale: He describes a hypothetical speech to "fellow sentients" about how to transition a business into a global enterprise: "Earlier, how you’d scale a business into a global enterprise was to find leaders. In the generative AI sphere... OpenAI making prompting the new data, which, if you’re a member, was once the new oil. Scaling, for us and everyone else, will soon be training on AI created content".
  • The Concept of "AI Dum Pukht": The article ultimately argues that while AI will handle the "supreme processing speeds" and solve problems automatically, human-created products—which he calls "Dum Pukht" (slow cooking)—will become the rare, high-value "collectibles" in a world where everything else is scaled by machines.

Based on the source provided, there is no article titled "Economy Needs to Draw on Patient Capital" or any content explicitly discussing "patient capital" within the provided page of The Economic Times.

The articles available in the provided source (dated February 15, 2026) are:

  • "A Regal Cambodian Experience of Intimacy and Balance..." by Sivakumar Sundaram (a culinary review).
  • "It Wanders Lonely as a Cloud That Floats..." by Atanu Biswas (an exploration of nihilism and Haruki Murakami).
  • "Climbing Mt Olypbud in Calcutta’s M. Chateaubriand" by Ruchir Joshi (a restaurant review).
  • "AI Will Usher a Golden Age of Dum Pukht" by Indrajit Hazra (an essay on AI scaling and the future value of human-created products).
  • "FAFO Parenting" (a column on modern parenting trends).

While Indrajit Hazra’s article mentions scaling businesses and the value of "slow" human intelligence (metaphorically represented by the "Dum Pukht" cooking method), it focuses on generative AI and "Non-Artificial Intelligence" (NAI) rather than "patient capital" or broader economic investment strategies.



Inequality in Annualized Comprehensive Wealth Across US Retirement Cohorts

 Annualized Comprehensive Wealth (ACW) is a broad measure of household resources designed to evaluate retirement security by converting total wealth into an actuarially fair joint life annuity. It serves as a metric to determine how much a household can sustainably consume annually over its expected remaining lifetime.

The sources highlight several key aspects of ACW within the context of wealth inequality:

Definition and Composition of ACW

  • Comprehensive Wealth (CW): Before annualization, the sources construct "comprehensive wealth" by augmenting traditional net worth with the actuarial present values of future payment streams. These include labor-market earnings, Social Security, defined-benefit (DB) pensions, annuities, life insurance, and government transfers.
  • Calculation: ACW is calculated by dividing this total lump sum by an annuity price ($P$) that accounts for household size, age-dependent survival probabilities, and a real interest rate.
  • Purpose: The primary advantage of ACW over traditional net worth is that it allows for meaningful comparisons across households of different ages and sizes by accounting for differences in household composition and expected longevity.

Trajectories and Heterogeneity in Retirement

  • The "Rising ACW" Trend: For the median household, ACW tends to increase throughout retirement. This suggests that households typically spend down their total resources more slowly than their remaining joint life expectancy is shortening.
  • Demographic Divergence: This upward trajectory is not universal. It is largely driven by college-educated and White households. In contrast, other demographic groups—such as Black and Hispanic households or those with less education—show relatively flat or declining ACW trajectories as they age

In the study of Inequality in Comprehensive Wealth, the sources define Annualized Comprehensive Wealth (ACW) as a measure that converts total household resources—including net worth and the present value of future income streams like Social Security and pensions—into a sustainable annual consumption amount based on life expectancy. The "trajectory" of this wealth refers to how ACW evolves as households age through retirement.

General Trajectories in Retirement

The sources report that, for the median household, ACW tends to rise throughout retirement. This upward trajectory indicates that the typical household is spending down its resources more slowly than its joint life expectancy is shortening. This behavior contrasts with simple life-cycle models but is consistent with models accounting for:

  • Precautionary motives regarding uncertain longevity and rising out-of-pocket medical expenses.
  • Bequest motives, where households intentionally preserve wealth to leave to heirs.
  • Frictions in the housing market, such as imperfect reverse mortgage markets that prevent households from easily liquidating home equity for consumption.

Heterogeneity and Inequality

While the median ACW rises, this pattern is not universal. The sources highlight considerable heterogeneity in trajectories, which directly contributes to widening inequality in retirement.

  • Education and Race: The rising trajectory of ACW is primarily driven by college-educated and White households. In contrast, households with less education (e.g., those without a high school degree) and Black or Hispanic households often show flat or even declining trajectories. For instance, while White households see ACW increase after age 70, the median trajectory for Black households is essentially flat, and it actually falls for Black and Hispanic members of the Silent and Older generation.
  • Wealth Brackets: Inequality is further underscored by wealth levels. For the top 10% of households, ACW rises dramatically at the oldest ages, meaning their wealth becomes increasingly large relative to their remaining life expectancy. For the bottom 10%, the trajectory remains flat at a very low level.
  • Asset Returns: Household-specific rates of return on assets like equities and housing are major drivers of these divergent trajectories. Higher-wealth, college-educated, and White households tend to have greater exposure to equities, allowing them to benefit more from market recoveries, such as the run-up following the Great Recession. Conversely, less-educated and non-White households disproportionately exited the stock market after 2008, missing out on significant asset price increases.

Broader Context of Inequality

The sources suggest that inequality in ACW increases with age. This widening gap is shaped by several structural factors:

  • The Transition in Pensions: The shift from traditional defined-benefit (DB) pensions to defined-contribution (DC) plans like 401(k)s has increased wealth inequality, as DC plan outcomes are more dependent on individual saving decisions and market movements.
  • Social Security as an Equalizer: Social Security remains the most critical resource for households lower in the wealth distribution, significantly reducing overall wealth inequality; without it, the 75-25 wealth ratio would rise from 4.7 to 7.3.
  • Survivorship Bias: Because wealthier individuals tend to live longer, the households observed at very advanced ages are increasingly drawn from higher-wealth groups, which mechanically increases measured inequality among the oldest cohorts.

Ultimately, the sources conclude that gaps in retirement preparation across education and demographic groups are likely to widen as households age, driven by differences in portfolio composition, labor-market attachment, and the realization of household-specific asset returns.


In the context of Inequality in Comprehensive Wealth, the sources identify several systemic and household-level drivers that shape the distribution of retirement resources. While traditional net worth is a significant factor, Annualized Comprehensive Wealth (ACW) reveals that inequality is driven by a complex interplay of asset market fluctuations, shifts in pension structures, and demographic characteristics.

1. Household-Specific Asset Returns

One of the most significant contributors to wealth inequality is the heterogeneity in real rates of return on assets like equities, fixed-income instruments, and housing.

  • Portfolio Exposure: Households with higher ACW typically have greater exposure to financial wealth and equities. This exposure allowed them to benefit disproportionately from the long-term run-up in the stock market following the Global Financial Crisis.
  • Market Timing and Exit: In contrast, less-educated and non-White households were more likely to exit the stock market following the 2008 crisis, causing them to miss out on subsequent historic asset price increases. This divergence in realized returns is a major driver of the widening 90–10 ratio and Gini coefficient.

2. The Transition from DB Pensions to DC Plans

The structural shift in how Americans prepare for retirement has fundamentally altered wealth distribution:

  • Increased Risk and Responsibility: The move from defined-benefit (DB) pensions to defined-contribution (DC) plans (like 401(k)s) has made retirement security more dependent on individual decisions regarding saving and asset allocation.
  • Greater Dispersion: The sources note that the 75-25 ratio for retirement account wealth is approximately 19.5, compared to only 9.8 for DB pension wealth. This suggests that the DC-based system is associated with significantly higher wealth inequality over time.

3. Education and Lifetime Earnings

Education serves as a primary driver of inequality, acting as a proxy for lifetime earnings, financial literacy, and survival expectations.

  • Trajectory Gaps: Median ACW for college graduates is over $100,000 and generally rises as they age, whereas it remains flat or even declines for those without a high school degree.
  • The College Premium: The rise in the college wage premium since 1980 has increased the lifetime earnings—and thus the comprehensive wealth—of more recent generations of college graduates relative to their less-educated peers.

4. Racial and Ethnic Disparities

Stark differences in ACW levels exist across race and ethnicity, with Black and Hispanic households holding between half and three-quarters the annual resources of White households.

  • Explained Factors: Using the Oaxaca-Blinder decomposition, the sources find that the majority of these gaps are accounted for by observable characteristics, including differences in education, bequest expectations, and household returns.
  • Intra-group Dispersion: Even after controlling for these factors, a higher share of Black or Hispanic households is statistically associated with higher overall inequality, reflecting considerable dispersion within these demographic groups.

5. Life-Cycle Factors and Expectations

Individual behaviors and expectations regarding the end of life also drive inequality as households age:

  • Bequest Motives: Wealthier households are more likely to preserve assets to leave as inheritances, leading to an upward-sloping ACW trajectory at older ages.
  • Medical Expenses: The rising variance of out-of-pocket medical expenses and long-term care shocks at older ages creates a "precautionary buffer" motive that affects wealth drawdown differently across the distribution.
  • Survivorship Bias: Because wealthier individuals tend to live longer, the pool of households observed at very advanced ages is increasingly composed of higher-wealth individuals, which mechanically increases measured inequality in the oldest cohorts.

6. Social Security as a Mitigating Factor

While the factors above drive inequality, Social Security acts as the most critical equalizer. It is the dominant resource for households in the lower half of the wealth distribution. The sources highlight that without Social Security, the ratio of comprehensive wealth at the 75th percentile to the 25th percentile would jump from 4.7 to 7.3.


In the context of Inequality in Comprehensive Wealth, the sources analyze cohort differences by comparing the Silent and Older generation (born 1945 and before), Early Baby Boomers (born 1946–1954), and Late Baby Boomers (born 1955–1964). While all cohorts share some general trends, such as rising wealth trajectories in retirement, they differ significantly in their resource levels, the composition of their wealth, and their vulnerability to economic shocks.

1. Resource Levels and Composition

  • Higher Average Wealth in Younger Cohorts: Younger cohorts (Baby Boomers) have arrived at the start of retirement with greater average resources than their elders. For households aged 61–70, the average Annualized Comprehensive Wealth (ACW) across these cohorts ranges between $75,000 and $100,000.
  • Shift in Wealth Type: There is a notable shift in the composition of wealth between generations. Older cohorts relied more on annuitized wealth (such as defined-benefit pensions), while younger cohorts hold a larger share of financial wealth (including 401(k)s and IRAs) and expected labor earnings.
  • Labor-Market Attachment: Younger cohorts exhibit a growing share of wealth from earnings, reflecting a higher labor-market attachment compared to previous generations.

2. Trajectories and Drawdown Patterns

  • Rising ACW Across Generations: At the median, ACW generally increases with age for all three cohorts. This suggests that across generations, households are spending down their resources more slowly than their life expectancy is shortening.
  • The "Great Recession" Impact: Cohorts experienced the 2008 financial crisis at different life stages, leading to divergent ACW outcomes:
    • Early and Late Boomers were in their 50s and 60s during the recession and experienced substantial drops in ACW due to higher exposure to housing and equity markets.
    • The Silent and Older Generation experienced only a modest drop followed by a steep increase, likely due to less exposure to these volatile markets.
    • Recovery: While Early Boomers recovered much of their recession-era losses, Late Boomers had only partially recovered by the end of the sample period.

3. Cohort-Specific Inequality

  • Initial Inequality: Measures such as the Gini coefficient and 90–10 ratio suggest that inequality was higher at younger ages (51–60) for more recent cohorts compared to older ones.
  • Pension Transition: The transition from defined-benefit (DB) pensions to defined-contribution (DC) plans has contributed to widening inequality within younger cohorts. The 75-25 ratio for retirement account wealth (common in younger cohorts) is 19.5, nearly double the 9.8 ratio for DB pension wealth (common in older cohorts).
  • Education Gaps: The college wage premium that rose after 1980 likely increased the lifetime earnings of more recent generations of college graduates, widening the gap between them and their less-educated peers within the same cohort.
  • Regression Insights: Interestingly, results from recentered influence function (RIF) regressions suggest that increasing the proportion of Baby Boomers relative to the pre-1948 generation might actually reduce overall measured inequality, though substantial inequality remains among the oldest households.

4. Racial Disparities Across Cohorts

The sources note that the stark gaps in ACW between Black and White households do not diminish with more recent cohorts. If anything, these disparities appear to be larger for younger generations, with White and non-Hispanic households showing a much faster rise in ACW than their Black and Hispanic counterparts as they age.


The sources examine Inequality in Comprehensive Wealth by applying four primary statistical measures to Annualized Comprehensive Wealth (ACW): the Gini coefficient, the 90–10 ratio, the top 10 percent share, and the Theil index. Using these measures, the researchers identify how retirement resource inequality evolves across age, time, and demographic groups.

Trends in Inequality Measures

  • Increase with Age: Most inequality measures show that inequality in ACW generally increases as households age, particularly for older cohorts. This is attributed to factors such as survivorship bias (wealthier individuals live longer), differing bequest motives, and the increasing variance of out-of-pocket medical expenses in later life.
  • Cohort Differences: Inequality was generally higher at younger ages (51–60) for more recent cohorts (Baby Boomers) compared to the Silent and Older generation. This shift is partially linked to the transition from defined-benefit (DB) pensions to defined-contribution (DC) plans, which introduces more dispersion based on individual saving and investment choices.
  • Impact of Economic Cycles: Inequality measures fluctuated significantly between 1998 and 2022. Inequality fell during the peak of the Great Recession (2010–2012) as sharp declines in housing and equity prices "shaved" more wealth from the top of the distribution. However, inequality increased markedly through 2018 as financial asset prices recovered, disproportionately benefiting higher-wealth households with more equity exposure.

Drivers of Inequality (RIF Regression Analysis)

To understand what drives these statistics, the sources use Recentered Influence Function (RIF) regressions, which estimate how specific household characteristics affect a distributional measure like the Gini coefficient.

  • Asset Returns: Household-specific rates of return are strongly and positively associated with inequality, particularly the Gini and 90–10 ratio. Wealthier households often have higher exposure to equities, and the resulting higher returns magnify wealth dispersion over time.
  • Education: A higher share of college-educated households is associated with higher inequality across all four measures, while a higher share of high-school–educated households is associated with lower inequality.
  • Race and Ethnicity: Higher concentrations of Black or Hispanic households are associated with significantly higher inequality in ACW, reflecting considerable dispersion within these groups even after controlling for other characteristics.
  • Bequest Motives: Interestingly, a higher probability of leaving or receiving a bequest is associated with lower inequality. This suggests that many households in the middle of the distribution plan to leave bequests, and those expecting to receive them may have less incentive to accumulate extreme individual wealth.

Mitigating Factors

  • Social Security as an Equalizer: Social Security is the most effective tool for reducing measured inequality in comprehensive wealth. The sources note that without Social Security, the 75–25 wealth ratio (the ratio of wealth at the 75th percentile to the 25th percentile) would rise from 4.7 to 7.3.
  • Marital Status: Increasing the share of married households tends to reduce inequality, while larger household sizes are associated with a slight increase in inequality measures.

Institutional Quality and High-Tech Investment in the EU

 The provided sources examine the widening productivity growth gap between the European Union (EU) and the United States (US), tracing its roots to differences in high-tech investment and the quality of institutional and regulatory frameworks.

The EU-US Productivity and Innovation Gap

Since the mid-1990s, EU countries have experienced slower productivity growth compared to the US, a divergence closely linked to an "innovation gap". The sources highlight several key differences in investment patterns:

  • Sectoral Focus: The US prioritizes investment in high-tech sectors such as ICT, Artificial Intelligence (AI), cloud computing, and biotechnology. In contrast, Europe remains concentrated in mature, mid-tech sectors, leading to what some researchers call a "middle-technology trap".
  • Investment Shares: In 2021, high-tech sectors accounted for approximately 33% of market sector gross fixed capital formation in the US, nearly double the 17% share in the EU.
  • ICT Contribution: The ICT sector alone explains about 48% of the average annual hourly productivity growth gap between the EU and the US from 2000 to 2019.
  • Spillover Effects: High-tech innovation provides broader productivity spillovers across the economy, whereas the incremental innovation typical of the EU's mid-tech focus has more limited benefits.

The Role of Institutions and Regulation

The sources argue that the EU's lag in high-tech is deeply rooted in its institutional and regulatory environment. High-tech sectors are inherently risky, characterized by trial-and-error and higher rates of project failure. Consequently, the cost of failure—influenced by regulations—is a critical determinant of investment.

  • Labor Market Rigidity: Restrictive Employment Protection Legislation (EPL), which increases the costs of dismissing workers, can deter firms from pursuing high-risk, high-reward disruptive innovation. While some argue EPL fosters trust, the sources suggest it often increases operational rigidity and reduces the incentive to adjust workforces in response to technological shifts.
  • Administrative Burdens: High costs and complex procedures for starting a business and resolving insolvency act as barriers to entry and exit, further discouraging investment in volatile high-tech sectors.
  • Governance Quality: Broader institutional factors, including the rule of law, control of corruption, and government effectiveness, create the "level playing field" necessary for economic actors to invest and innovate.

Impact on High-Tech and AI Investment

Empirical analysis in the sources indicates a strong correlation between high-quality institutions and investment in innovative sectors.

  • Closing the Gap: Raising the institutional and regulatory quality of all EU countries to the level of the current "EU frontier" (the best-performing member states) could increase the share of investment in high-tech sectors by as much as 50%. This reform would effectively close the investment gap with the US by approximately half.
  • Artificial Intelligence: AI-intensive sectors are particularly sensitive to these frameworks. Enhancing institutional governance could boost investment in AI-intensive sectors by over 7 percentage points.
  • Economic Size: Beyond investment shares, more efficient institutions are associated with a larger relative economic size (value added) of innovative sectors compared to traditional ones.

Policy Implications

The findings suggest that for the EU to increase its competitiveness and productivity growth, it must move beyond industrial composition and address fundamental structural factors. Key recommendations include:

  • Simplifying business procedures and reducing administrative burdens for entrepreneurs.
  • Making labor markets more flexible to lower the costs of failure and restructuring in risky sectors.
  • Strengthening governance and the rule of law to provide a more stable environment for long-term investment.
  • Improving insolvency frameworks to lower the costs associated with project failures and firm exits.

The provided sources identify institutional and regulatory quality as the fundamental drivers behind the widening productivity and investment gap between the European Union and the United States. While the US has successfully pivoted toward high-growth, high-tech sectors, the EU remains caught in a "middle-technology trap," largely due to frameworks that increase the costs of innovation and failure.

Core Institutional and Regulatory Indicators

The sources evaluate institutional quality through three primary lenses, noting that higher scores in these areas are directly correlated with increased high-tech investment:

  • Institutional Delivery Index: This broad measure encompasses the rule of law, control of corruption, government effectiveness, and regulatory quality. It reflects the extent to which a country provides a "level playing field" and sound economic incentives for actors to invest and innovate.
  • Employment Protection Legislation (EPL): This index measures the stringency of regulations regarding worker dismissals. While some argue EPL fosters trust, the sources suggest that for high-tech sectors, strict EPL increases labor market rigidity and operational costs, making it difficult for firms to adjust their workforces in response to rapid technological shifts.
  • Business Entry and Exit Frameworks: This includes the Starting a Business score (administrative burdens on entrepreneurs) and the Resolving Insolvency score (the ease and cost of firm exit).

The Mechanism: Risk and the "Cost of Failure"

The sources argue that institutional quality is more critical for high-tech sectors (e.g., AI, ICT, biotech) than for traditional mid-tech sectors because high-tech innovation is inherently disruptive and risky.

  • Trial-and-Error: Innovative sectors involve significant trial-and-error and higher rates of project failure.
  • Cost of Failure: The expected profitability of investing in high-tech depends heavily on the costs associated with failure and restructuring.
  • Barriers to Innovation: Burdensome regulations and rigid labor laws disproportionately increase these costs, deterring firms from pursuing "primary innovation" (creating new products) and pushing them toward "secondary innovation" (improving existing products).

Empirical Impact on High-Tech and AI Investment

The research demonstrates a causal link between these factors and sectoral investment shares:

  • Closing the Investment Gap: Raising the institutional and regulatory quality of all EU countries to the level of the "EU frontier" (the best-performing member states) could increase the share of investment in high-tech sectors by up to 50%. This reform alone would close the EU-US high-tech investment gap by approximately half.
  • Sensitivity of AI: AI-intensive sectors are particularly sensitive to these frameworks. Improving institutional governance could boost investment in AI-intensive sectors by over 7 percentage points.
  • Economic Size: More efficient institutions are associated not just with higher investment shares, but with a larger relative economic size (value added) of innovative sectors compared to traditional ones.

Institutional Origins and Policy Implications

To address potential bias, the study uses legal origins (e.g., English common law vs. French civil law) as instruments, finding that historical legal ideologies continue to influence modern regulatory stringency and, consequently, investment patterns.

The sources conclude that to escape the "middle-technology trap" and enhance competitiveness, the EU must prioritize structural reforms. These include:

  1. Reducing administrative burdens for starting and managing businesses.
  2. Increasing labor market flexibility to lower the costs of restructuring in risky sectors.
  3. Strengthening the rule of law and governance to reduce uncertainty for long-term investors.
  4. Improving insolvency frameworks to facilitate the efficient reallocation of resources from failing projects to new opportunities.

The provided sources demonstrate that institutional and regulatory quality are decisive factors in determining the size and success of high-tech sectors within the European Union. While the United States has successfully pivoted toward high-growth, high-tech industries, the EU remains largely confined to a "middle-technology trap," focusing on mature, mid-tech sectors with limited productivity spillovers.

The High-Tech Investment Disparity

The sources quantify a significant gap in high-tech investment between the two regions:

  • Sectoral Concentration: In 2021, high-tech sectors accounted for 33% of market sector gross fixed capital formation in the US, nearly double the 17% share observed in the EU.
  • Productivity Growth: This investment gap directly translates to slower productivity growth; the ICT sector alone explains roughly 48% of the average annual hourly productivity growth gap between the EU and the US from 2000 to 2019.
  • Innovation Style: US high-tech sectors drive "primary innovation" (introducing new products), whereas the EU’s mid-tech focus results in "secondary innovation" (incremental improvements to existing products).

Vulnerability of High-Tech to Institutional Quality

High-tech sectors are uniquely sensitive to institutional and regulatory frameworks because they are inherently disruptive and risky.

  • The Cost of Failure: Innovation in fields like AI, ICT, and biotechnology involves significant trial-and-error and high rates of project failure. Burdensome regulations disproportionately increase the "costs of failure and restructuring," deterring firms from investing in these volatile sectors.
  • Labor Market Rigidity: Stringent Employment Protection Legislation (EPL)—regulations governing worker dismissals—increases labor market rigidity. In high-tech sectors that require frequent workforce reallocation and high mobility, strict EPL acts as a significant barrier to investment and scaling.
  • Entry and Exit Barriers: Administrative burdens for starting a business and inefficient insolvency frameworks (exit costs) further discourage entrepreneurial risk-taking in cutting-edge industries.

Empirical Impact of Reform

The research indicates that improving the quality of EU institutions could dramatically reshape its high-tech landscape:

  • Closing the Gap: Raising the institutional and regulatory quality of all EU countries to the level of the "EU frontier" (the best-performing member states) could increase high-tech investment shares by as much as 50%. This reform alone would close approximately half of the investment gap with the US.
  • Impact on AI: Artificial Intelligence-intensive sectors are particularly responsive to these factors. Enhancing institutional governance is estimated to boost investment in AI-intensive sectors by over 7 percentage points.
  • Economic Size: Beyond investment, efficient institutions are associated with a larger relative economic size (value added) of innovative and disruptive sectors compared to traditional ones.

Broader Institutional Context

The sources use legal origins (e.g., French civil law vs. English common law) as a lens to explain why these regulatory differences exist, noting that historical legal ideologies continue to influence modern state intervention and regulatory stringency. To escape the middle-technology trap, the sources conclude that the EU must prioritize structural reforms—specifically reducing administrative burdens, increasing labor market flexibility, and strengthening the rule of law—to create a dynamic environment where high-tech sectors can flourish.


The sources describe Classification of Innovativeness as a central methodological tool used to distinguish how different sectors respond to institutional and regulatory environments. By categorizing sectors based on their level of technological advancement, the researchers demonstrate that high-tech and disruptive industries are disproportionately sensitive to the quality of governance and the "cost of failure" compared to traditional, mid-tech industries.

The sources employ three distinct methods to classify sectoral innovativeness:

1. Eurostat High-Tech Taxonomy

This approach uses a binary classification (dummy variable) based on the Eurostat high-tech aggregation of NACE Rev. 2 codes at the 2-digit level.

  • High-Tech Manufacturing: Includes sectors such as C21 (Pharmaceuticals) and C26 (Computers, electronic, and optical products).
  • High-Tech Knowledge-Intensive Services: Includes J58–J60 (Publishing and media), J61 (Telecommunications), and J62–J63 (Computer programming and information services).
  • Context: This classification helps illustrate the "middle-technology trap," where the EU remains focused on mature, mid-tech sectors while the US dominates these high-tech categories.

2. Patent Intensity

To provide a more granular, continuous measure of innovativeness, the researchers classify sectors based on their patenting activity.

  • Methodology: They match International Patent Classification (IPC) codes from over 18 million US patent applications to NACE codes. US data is used specifically to mitigate endogeneity issues, ensuring that the measure of innovativeness is not biased by the EU's own institutional frameworks.
  • Finding: The sources find that improvements in institutional frameworks have a disproportionately stronger effect on sectors with higher patenting activity, such as computer manufacturing (C26), compared to the lowest-ranking sectors.

3. Artificial Intelligence (AI) Intensity

This method focuses on the most modern and disruptive technological frontier using a taxonomy developed by Calvino et al. (2024). Sectors are ranked based on four dimensions of AI intensity:

  • AI Human Capital Demand: Demand for AI-related skills.
  • AI Innovation: Sector-specific AI-related patents.
  • AI Use: The actual adoption of AI by firms.
  • AI Exposure: The extent to which AI can perform tasks associated with occupations in that sector.
  • Adjustment for Bias: The researchers specifically exclude regulatory barriers from the AI exposure measure to avoid "circularity," ensuring the classification isn't defined by the very regulations they are trying to study.
  • Highly AI-Intensive Sectors: Beyond typical tech, this includes K (Financial and Insurance) and M (Professional, Scientific, and Technical Activities).

Significance within the Institutional Context

The classification of sectors is vital because it reveals that not all industries are affected equally by regulation.

  • Risk and Uncertainty: Innovative sectors involve significant trial-and-error and higher failure rates. Therefore, high costs associated with Employment Protection Legislation (EPL), business entry, and insolvency proceedings deter investment specifically in high-tech sectors while having less impact on stable, mid-tech industries.
  • Primary vs. Secondary Innovation: The sources cite research suggesting that rigid labor markets (high firing costs) lead countries to specialize in "secondary innovation" (incremental improvements), whereas flexible markets foster "primary innovation" (introducing entirely new products).
  • Policy Impact: By using these classifications, the sources estimate that raising EU institutional quality to the "frontier" would boost investment in these specific high-tech and AI-intensive sectors by up to 50%, whereas traditional sectors would see a much smaller marginal impact.

The key empirical findings in the sources demonstrate a strong causal link between the quality of institutional and regulatory frameworks and the level of investment in high-tech, innovative, and AI-intensive sectors across the European Union,. These findings suggest that the EU's persistent productivity lag behind the United States is deeply rooted in governance structures that inadvertently deter investment in risky, cutting-edge industries,.

Core Findings on Investment and the EU-US Gap

The primary finding of the study is that raising the institutional and regulatory quality of all EU countries to the level of the current "EU frontier" (the best-performing member states) would have a transformative effect on the economy:

  • 50% Increase in High-Tech Investment: Such reforms could increase the share of investment in high-technology sectors by as much as 50%,.
  • Closing the Gap with the US: This increase would effectively close approximately half of the existing high-tech investment gap between the EU and the US,,. For context, in 2021, high-tech sectors accounted for 33% of market sector investment in the US, compared to only 17% in the EU.
  • AI-Specific Gains: Enhancing institutional governance alone could boost investment in AI-intensive sectors by over 7 percentage points,.

Impact Across Different Sector Classifications

The sources used three distinct methods to classify "innovativeness," finding that better institutions consistently benefited more advanced sectors:

  • High-Tech Taxonomy: More efficient institutional frameworks were positively associated with higher investment shares in sectors classified as high-tech by Eurostat.
  • Patent Intensity: Improvements in institutional frameworks had a disproportionately stronger effect on sectors with higher patenting activity compared to low-innovation sectors.
  • AI Intensity: Sectors with high AI intensity were found to be more sensitive to institutional conditions than traditional sectors. This effect was particularly pronounced in a more recent sample (2019–2023), reflecting AI's growing economic prominence.

The Mechanism: Risk and the "Cost of Failure"

The empirical evidence supports the theory that institutions matter most for high-tech because these sectors are inherently characterized by trial-and-error and high failure rates,.

  • Sensitivity to Costs: The expected profitability of high-tech investment depends heavily on the costs of failure and restructuring.
  • Burdensome Regulations: Rigid labor laws (Employment Protection Legislation) and complex administrative procedures for starting or closing a business act as "costs of failure" that deter firms from pursuing disruptive, primary innovation,,.
  • Relative Success of Mid-Tech: In contrast, the sources found that mid-tech sectors, which involve lower risk and incremental innovation, are less sensitive to these regulatory constraints.

Robustness and Broader Economic Impacts

The researchers employed an Instrumental Variable (IV) approach using legal origins to establish that these findings are causal rather than just correlations,. The results remained robust even when:

  • Controlling for GDP per capita and corporate tax rates,.
  • Excluding financial hubs like Ireland and Luxembourg.
  • Using Value Added Share as a dependent variable, which showed that better institutions are associated with a larger relative economic size for innovative sectors,.
  • Using Insolvency Frameworks as an indicator; efficient insolvency procedures were found to be highly important for investment in innovative sectors.

Policy Implications

The empirical results suggest that to escape the "middle-technology trap," the EU must prioritize structural reforms that lower the barriers to entry and the costs of failure,. Specifically, the sources recommend easing labor market rigidities, reducing administrative burdens for startups, and improving insolvency frameworks to allow for a more dynamic reallocation of resources toward frontier technologies,.


The provided sources suggest that the European Union’s productivity lag is not merely a result of industrial preference but is deeply rooted in the quality of its governance and regulatory frameworks. To bridge the investment gap with the United States and escape the "middle-technology trap," the sources propose several critical policy shifts focused on lowering the costs of innovation and failure.

1. Strengthening Institutional Governance and the Rule of Law

The sources emphasize that high-quality institutions are the foundation of a competitive high-tech economy.

  • Effective Governance: Policies should aim to improve "Institutional Delivery," which includes strengthening the rule of law, controlling corruption, and enhancing government effectiveness.
  • Reducing Uncertainty: Sound institutions provide a "level playing field" and reduce the economic uncertainty that often discourages long-term, high-risk investments in disruptive technologies.
  • Economic Impact: The sources estimate that elevating institutional quality to the level of the "EU frontier" (the highest-performing member states) could increase the high-tech investment share by roughly 30%.

2. Enhancing Labor Market Flexibility (EPL Reform)

A major policy implication involves the reform of Employment Protection Legislation (EPL), which governs the strictness of worker dismissals.

  • Lowering Reallocation Costs: Disruptive innovation requires frequent workforce reallocation and rapid scaling. Current rigidities increase operational costs and deter firms from pursuing high-risk, primary innovation (introducing new products) in favor of safer, secondary innovation (improving existing products).
  • Targeted Flexicurity: Policymakers are encouraged to ease firing costs, which would incentivize firms to enter sectors characterized by risky technology and trial-and-error processes.

3. Reducing Administrative and Exit Burdens

The sources identify business entry and exit barriers as significant deterrents to high-tech dynamism.

  • Simplifying Start-ups: Reducing the administrative burden on entrepreneurs (as measured by the "Starting a Business score") is one of the most effective ways to boost investment; reforms in this area alone could increase high-tech investment shares by up to 50%.
  • Insolvency Frameworks: Efficient insolvency procedures are critical because they lower the "cost of failure". Policies that make it easier and cheaper to resolve insolvency allow resources to be reallocated more dynamically from failing projects to frontier technologies.

4. Fostering AI and Frontier Technology Adoption

Given that AI-intensive sectors are particularly sensitive to regulatory environments, the sources suggest that general institutional improvements will have a disproportionately positive effect on the AI landscape.

  • Recent Relevance: Analysis of the 2019–2023 period shows that as AI technology has matured, the importance of institutional quality in fostering its adoption has increased.
  • Sensitivity: Enhancing governance could boost investment in AI-intensive sectors by over 7 percentage points.

5. Integrating Complementary Enablers

While structural and regulatory reforms are central, the sources conclude they must be part of a broader, integrated strategy.

  • Beyond Regulation: Reforms to labor markets and administrative procedures need to be complemented by access to finance, robust digital infrastructure, and education/skill-upgrading systems.
  • Global Competitiveness: Combining these structural improvements with innovation enablers is seen as the only viable path to closing the productivity and investment gap with the US.

Friday, February 13, 2026

Tracing the Arc of Causal Inference in Economics

 The provided sources identify the 18th and 19th centuries as the foundational "Philosophy" era of causal inference in economics, setting the stage for three centuries of methodological evolution.

18th Century: David Hume and the Problem of Induction

The sources credit David Hume with initiating the "modern problem of causation". His contributions, specifically in A Treatise of Human Nature (1739) and An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding (1748), focused on a fundamental skeptical challenge known as the Problem of Induction. Hume questioned the empirical basis of causality, asking: "what do we actually observe when we say that one thing causes another?". The sources note that this philosophical question remains without a "fully satisfying answer" even in the modern era.

19th Century: John Stuart Mill and Methods of Inquiry

The timeline progresses into the 19th century with John Stuart Mill, specifically citing his 1843 "Methods of Inquiry". While the text does not elaborate on Mill's specific methods, it positions his work as the next major philosophical milestone following Hume’s skepticism.

The Larger Context in Economics

In the broader context of causal inference, these philosophical roots are the starting point for a lineage that later transitioned into various methodological frameworks:

  • Experiments: Moving from theory to practical application with figures like Neyman (1923) and Fisher (1935).
  • Structural and Predictive Causality: Developing formal models such as Haavelmo’s probability approach (1944) and the Lucas critique (1976).
  • The Credibility Revolution: Addressing the "credibility crisis" in the late 20th century through the work of Leamer, Rubin, and Angrist.
  • Modern Methods: Integrating Directed Acyclic Graphs (DAGs) and Machine Learning into causal analysis.

The sources suggest that the philosophical inquiries of Hume and Mill established a "recurring tension" that persists in economics today: the choice between Design vs. Structure (identifying effects without knowing mechanisms) and Local vs. General (the ability of estimates to generalize).


In the early 20th century, the study of causal inference in economics transitioned from philosophical inquiry into the "Experiments" era, which provided the mathematical and statistical foundations for identifying causal effects.

According to the timeline provided in the sources, this period is defined by two landmark contributions:

  • 1923: Neyman and Potential Outcomes: Jerzy Neyman introduced the concept of potential outcomes, a framework that remains central to causal inference today. This approach allows researchers to conceptualize what would have happened to the same unit under different treatment conditions.
  • 1935: Fisher and Randomization: Ronald Fisher formalised the role of randomization. By randomly assigning treatments, researchers could ensure that groups were comparable, thereby isolating the causal effect of a specific variable.

The Larger Context in Economics

In the broader history of economic methodology, the "Experiments" era represents a shift from the skepticism of the 18th and 19th centuries (Hume and Mill) toward a more practical, design-based approach to science.

  1. Addressing the "Design vs. Structure" Tension: This era prioritizes "Design"—the use of experimental controls and randomization—to identify effects. This often sits in tension with "Structure," which seeks to understand the underlying mechanisms of why something happens. The sources note that a recurring question for this approach is: "Can we identify effects without mechanisms?".
  2. Foundation for the "Credibility Revolution": The work of Neyman and Fisher laid the groundwork for the later "Credibility Revolution" (1970s–1990s). During that later period, economists like Rubin (1974) refined the causal model and Angrist (1996) developed the LATE (Local Average Treatment Effect) framework, both of which are deeply rooted in the early 20th-century experimental logic.
  3. Generalization Challenges: The sources highlight a second recurring tension relevant to this era: "Local vs. General." While experiments (and the potential outcomes framework) are powerful for identifying effects in a specific context, there is a persistent debate over whether these estimates generalize to broader populations or different settings.

While these early 20th-century developments were revolutionary, the sources characterize the history of causal inference as an "unfinished" journey that continues to evolve through structural modeling, the credibility revolution, and modern machine learning.


In the mid-20th century, the study of causal inference in economics entered the "Structural" era, a period characterized by the development of formal mathematical and probabilistic models to explain the underlying mechanisms of economic behavior.

According to the provided sources, this era is defined by several pivotal milestones:

  • 1944: Haavelmo and the Probability Approach: Trygve Haavelmo pioneered the probability approach to econometrics, which provided a formal framework for treating economic models as systems of simultaneous equations.
  • 1969: Granger and Predictive Causality: Clive Granger introduced predictive causality (now known as Granger causality), a method for determining whether one time series is useful in forecasting another, which added a temporal dimension to causal analysis.
  • 1976: Lucas and the Policy Critique: Robert Lucas famously argued that historical relationships between economic variables might change if government policy changes because individuals adjust their expectations. This policy critique highlighted the danger of relying on "structure" that is not grounded in fundamental behavioral parameters.
  • 1979: Heckman and the Selection Model: James Heckman developed the selection model to address bias arising from non-random samples, providing a structural way to account for why certain data points are observed while others are not.

The Larger Context in Economics

Within the broader evolution of the field, the Structural era represents a specific philosophical and methodological stance:

  1. The "Structure" in Design vs. Structure: This era directly addresses the "recurring tension" of whether we can identify effects without understanding mechanisms. Unlike the preceding "Experiments" era (Neyman and Fisher), which focused on the design of trials to isolate effects, the Structural era sought to model the mechanisms—the "how" and "why" behind economic phenomena.
  2. Addressing Generalizability: This period also speaks to the tension of Local vs. General. By attempting to model the fundamental "structure" of the economy, researchers in this era aimed to create estimates that could generalize across different policies and environments, rather than just being valid for a specific experimental group.
  3. Bridge to the Credibility Revolution: The sources position this era between the early experimentalists and the "Credibility Revolution" of the late 20th century. While structural modeling provided deep insights into mechanisms, the later revolution (led by figures like Leamer, Rubin, and Angrist) would eventually challenge the "credibility" of these complex structural assumptions, pushing the field back toward design-based approaches.

Ultimately, the Structural era was an ambitious attempt to provide the "satisfying answer" to David Hume’s 18th-century skepticism by moving beyond mere observation to a deep, model-based understanding of causal relationships.


In the late 20th century, the Credibility Revolution emerged as a critical methodological shift within the history of causal inference in economics, primarily aimed at addressing the reliability of empirical findings.

According to the sources, this era is defined by three landmark contributions:

  • 1974: Rubin and the Causal Model: Donald Rubin introduced a formal causal model (often referred to as the Rubin Causal Model), which built upon the potential outcomes framework to provide a rigorous mathematical basis for identifying causal effects in non-experimental data.
  • 1983: Leamer and the "Credibility Crisis": Edward Leamer published a highly influential critique of econometric practices, highlighting a "credibility crisis". He argued that many empirical results were fragile and highly dependent on specific, often arbitrary, modeling choices made by researchers.
  • 1996: Angrist and the LATE Framework: Joshua Angrist developed the LATE (Local Average Treatment Effect) framework, which provided a clear interpretation for causal estimates derived from instrumental variables, acknowledging that these effects are often "local" to a specific sub-population affected by the instrument.

The Larger Context in Economics

The Credibility Revolution is positioned as one of "at least two methodological revolutions" in a three-century-long timeline that remains "unfinished". Within the broader evolution of the field, this era represents a pivotal response to the "Recurring Tensions" of causal inference:

  1. Design vs. Structure: This era signaled a move away from the complex, assumption-heavy "Structural" models of the mid-20th century. Instead, it prioritized "Design"—emphasizing research designs (like natural experiments) that could identify causal effects even if the underlying behavioral mechanisms were not fully modeled. This directly addresses the question: "Can we identify effects without mechanisms?".
  2. Local vs. General: The Credibility Revolution brought the tension of "Do estimates generalize?" to the forefront. While the LATE framework (1996) offered a way to identify credible causal effects, it also forced economists to confront the fact that these effects are often "Local" and may not easily generalize to broader populations or different contexts.

By focusing on transparency and robust research designs, the Credibility Revolution sought to provide a more "satisfying answer" to the fundamental skepticism first raised by David Hume in the 18th century regarding what we truly observe when we claim one thing causes another.


In the 21st century, the field of causal inference has entered its "Modern" era, which the sources characterize as an integration of computer science, graphical modeling, and machine learning into economic analysis.

According to the provided timeline, this era is defined by three major milestones:

  • 2000: Pearl and DAGs: Judea Pearl introduced Directed Acyclic Graphs (DAGs) and do-calculus. This provided a new mathematical and visual language to represent causal assumptions and rigorously determine whether a causal effect can be identified from available data.
  • 2018: Athey and Causal Forests: Susan Athey developed causal forests, a machine learning approach based on random forests. This method is specifically designed to estimate heterogeneous treatment effects, allowing researchers to understand how causal impacts vary across different types of individuals or environments.
  • 2018: Double Machine Learning (DML): This period also marked the rise of DML (ML + causality), a framework that uses machine learning to better control for complex, high-dimensional variables that might bias causal estimates.

The Larger Context in Economics

The Modern era is the latest chapter in a journey that "spans three centuries and at least two methodological revolutions". Within the broader evolution of the field, these modern developments address the "Recurring Tensions" identified in the sources:

  1. Design vs. Structure: Modern methods like DAGs and DML offer a way to bridge this tension. While the Credibility Revolution (Late 20th Century) prioritized design, the Modern era uses graphical structures and machine learning to bring back a level of "structure" that is more flexible and data-driven than the simultaneous equations of the mid-20th century.
  2. Local vs. General: By focusing on tools like causal forests that identify varying effects across populations, the Modern era directly tackles the question: "Do estimates generalize?". These tools move beyond the single "Local" estimates of the late 20th century toward a more nuanced understanding of how effects might apply more generally or change in different contexts.
  3. An "Unfinished" Journey: The sources emphasize that despite the sophistication of 21st-century machine learning, the field remains "in important ways, unfinished". The journey from Hume’s 1739 skepticism to modern algorithms shows that while our tools have become more powerful, the fundamental philosophical challenge of what we "actually observe" when we claim causality still lacks a "fully satisfying answer".

Based on the sources and our conversation history, the "Recurring Tensions" represent the fundamental, unresolved debates that have persisted throughout the three-century evolution of causal inference in economics. These tensions highlight the trade-offs researchers face when choosing a methodological approach.

The sources identify two primary recurring tensions:

1. Design vs. Structure: Can we identify effects without mechanisms?

This tension centers on whether a researcher should focus on the "Design" of a study (how data is generated) or the Structure of the underlying economic system (the theoretical "why" behind an effect).

  • Design-focused eras: In the Experiments (1920s-30s) and Credibility Revolution (1970s-90s) eras, the priority was on isolating a specific effect through randomization or natural experiments. This approach often identifies that something happened without necessarily explaining the behavioral mechanisms.
  • Structure-focused eras: The Structural era (mid-20th century) prioritized modeling the internal logic and mechanisms of the economy (e.g., Haavelmo’s probability approach or Lucas’s policy critique).
  • Modern Synthesis: The Modern era (21st century) uses tools like DAGs and Machine Learning to attempt to reconcile these two, using data-driven structures to inform better design.

2. Local vs. General: Do estimates generalize?

This tension addresses the external validity of causal findings—whether a result found in one specific context can be applied to other populations or policies.

  • The "Local" Challenge: The Credibility Revolution (specifically Angrist’s 1996 LATE framework) acknowledged that many credible designs only identify effects for a specific sub-group (a "local" effect).
  • The "General" Goal: The Structural era aimed for more generalizable "structural parameters" that would remain stable even if policies changed.
  • Modern Advancements: Current methods, such as Susan Athey’s causal forests (2018), use machine learning to map out heterogeneous treatment effects, providing a more nuanced way to see how "local" findings might generalize across different environments.

The Larger Context: An Unfinished Journey

These tensions exist within a larger historical context that begins with David Hume’s 1739 skepticism regarding the "problem of induction". The sources emphasize that because we cannot "actually observe" one thing causing another, these tensions remain "unfinished". Despite two major methodological revolutions and the rise of modern algorithms, there is still "no fully satisfying answer" to the core philosophical challenges of causality, making these recurring tensions the central drivers of ongoing innovation in the field.



AI and the Economics of the Human Touch

The sources define "the human touch" as a characteristic of specific jobs and tasks for which demand persists even when the technology to automate them exists. In the broader discussion of AI, this concept serves as a cornerstone for economic optimism, suggesting that human labor will remain essential despite rapid technological advancement.

The Human Touch as an Economic "Normal Good"

The sources argue that the human touch is a "normal good," meaning that as people’s incomes increase, their demand for human-delivered experiences also rises.

  • Income and Quality: Higher-income customers often prefer and pay for the quality added by a human, such as attentive service in fine dining or the expertise of a highly trained salesperson when purchasing luxury items like cars or expensive suits.
  • The Virtuous Cycle of AI: If AI drives a surge in national productivity and wealth, the sources suggest it will lead to a surge in demand for human-touch industries—such as luxury services, personal trainers, and handmade goods—thereby counterbalancing jobs lost to automation.

Historical Precedents of Persistent Demand

The sources provide several historical examples where "canned" or automated versions of human work failed to replace the original:

  • Music: The invention of the player piano (1895) and recorded music (starting with the phonograph in 1877) led to fears that live musicians would be obsolete. However, there are now more than 200,000 employed musicians in the U.S., more than at any time since 1850, because people still value the experience of watching talented humans perform.
  • Service: Tabletop ordering systems like Ziosk have been capable of automating the role of the waiter for over a decade, yet 1.9 million waiters remain employed in the U.S.. The presence of a waiter is seen as a signal of service quality that automation cannot replicate.
  • Sales and Arts: Industries like travel agencies, retail sales, and insurance continue to employ millions of people because the ability to stand face-to-face and sell is a distinct, valued skill. In the arts, a perfect visual replica of a painting loses millions in value if discovered to be a forgery, highlighting that the human origin itself is what is being purchased.

AI, Policy, and Economic Stratification

While optimistic, the sources acknowledge that AI will be disruptive for jobs where the human touch is irrelevant. To manage this, they propose:

  • Income Redistribution: Using the wealth generated by AI productivity to offset rising inequality through political measures.
  • Wage Subsidies: Implementing policies that increase the demand for human work and raise the pay for low-wage, human-touch jobs.
  • Economic Re-segmentation: Commentary in the sources suggests a potential future where AI becomes the default for lower-end services, while human-delivered experiences become premium goods centered around trust and presence

The sources use historical examples of automation to argue that the "human touch" creates a persistent demand for human labor, even when technology exists to replace specific tasks. These historical lessons suggest that while AI may be disruptive, the fundamental human preference for human-delivered experiences will likely prevent a total devastation of the labor market.

Lessons from the Music Industry

The music industry provides the most detailed historical case study for how automation and human performance coexist.

  • The Player Piano (1895): The invention of the "pianola" allowed for the full automation of piano playing through paper rolls. Although it removed the need for a skilled human to play the keys, live piano players are still employed today in hotels, bars, and restaurants because listeners simply prefer the human element.
  • Recorded Music (1877–Present): When the phonograph was invented and "canned music" entered theaters in 1927, musicians panicked and formed the Music Defense League to campaign against job losses. However, despite 130 years of automation—from cylinders to Spotify—there are now more than 200,000 employed musicians in the U.S., a higher number than at any point since 1850. The sources note that people often choose to pay for a "bad bar band" over a masterpiece recording because they value the live human experience.

Lessons from the Service and Sales Sectors

The sources highlight that technology often "solves" a job on paper, yet the human role persists in practice.

  • Waiters and Tabletop Ordering: The technology to automate waiters (like the Ziosk tablet) has been available for over a decade. While these devices are now in thousands of restaurants, there are still 1.9 million waiters in the U.S.. The sources argue that a waiter provides a "signal of service quality" that automation cannot replicate, particularly in fine dining where the human touch is an essential part of the "ambience".
  • Retail and Sales: Despite the widespread availability of online booking and self-checkout, the U.S. still employs 67,500 travel agents, 3.2 million cashiers, and 4.2 million retail sales workers. This suggests that the ability to stand "face to face" and sell remains a valued skill that thorough automation has failed to replace.

Larger Context: AI and the "Normal Good"

The historical persistence of these roles leads to the economic theory that the human touch is a "normal good"—a product for which demand increases as incomes rise.

  • Economic Optimism: If AI increases national productivity and wealth, that wealth will likely be spent on human-touch industries like luxury goods, personal trainers, and fine dining.
  • Re-segmentation of the Market: Historical lessons suggest that automation may not eliminate work but rather re-segment it. AI might become the "default" for lower-end or high-friction services, while human-delivered experiences become premium goods centered around trust, presence, and status.
  • Policy and Displacement: The sources acknowledge that displacement will occur where the human touch is irrelevant (much like movie theater musicians of the silent film era). However, the historical "unwavering demand" for human work suggests that the challenge of AI is a political one (redistribution of wealth) rather than an economic one (a total lack of work).

In the sources, human touch in services is presented as a primary reason for economic optimism because it identifies sectors where human labor remains resilient despite the availability of automation. Within the context of AI and the "Economics of the Human Touch," these services are defined by a demand for quality, trust, and social presence that technology cannot easily replicate.

The Waiter Case Study: Automation vs. Value

The sources highlight the restaurant industry as a prime example of human-led services surviving automation.

  • Technological Availability: The capacity to automate waiters has existed for over a decade via tabletop systems like Ziosk and smartphone QR codes.
  • Persistence of Labor: Despite this, there are still 1.9 million waiters in the U.S., with government forecasts suggesting only a minimal 1% decline over the next decade.
  • Signaling Quality: The sources argue that a waiter adds value beyond literal tasks like taking orders; they provide a "signal of service quality" that is as essential to the experience as the décor or the food. In fine dining, the human touch actually scales upward, with more staff performing specialized tasks (like opening doors or manning cheese carts) to enhance the premium experience.

Sales and High-End Professional Services

The sources note that the ability to stand "face to face" and sell is a skill that continues to command high demand.

  • Retail and Travel: Even with online booking and self-checkout, millions remain employed as travel agents, cashiers, and retail workers.
  • Complex Sales: High-earning roles like sales engineers and insurance agents (over half a million people) rely on high levels of social skills and training to sell expensive or complex goods like cars, suits, and watches.

Economic Concept: The "Normal Good"

A central pillar of the "Economics of the Human Touch" is the idea that human interaction is a "normal good".

  • Wealth and Demand: This means that as people's incomes rise—potentially fueled by AI-driven productivity gains—their demand for human-delivered experiences also increases.
  • Feedback Loop: If AI makes the country richer per capita, that wealth will likely be spent on more fine dining, personal trainers, and luxury services, creating a "surge in demand" for human labor to counterbalance jobs lost to automation.

Market Stratification and Re-segmentation

The sources suggest that the service economy will not be eliminated by AI, but rather re-segmented.

  • AI as the Default: Lower-end, high-friction services may move toward AI as the default to save costs.
  • Human as the Premium: Human-delivered experiences may become stratified as premium goods, centered around "trust, presence, and signal".

Ultimately, the sources conclude that while AI will be disruptive for jobs where the human touch is irrelevant, the "constant, unwavering demand" for human interaction ensures a permanent and substantial role for human work in the future economy.


The sources suggest that if AI proves to be highly disruptive, policy responses should focus on managing income inequality and bolstering the demand for human labor. These responses are predicated on the economic theory that the "human touch" ensures a persistent baseline of work that policy can then amplify.

Income Redistribution to Address Inequality

The sources anticipate that AI-driven productivity will make the country significantly wealthier per capita, but they warn that median wage growth may continue to lag behind mean productivity gains.

  • Fiscal Space: The same AI-driven growth that creates inequality also generates the "fiscal space" necessary to fund redistribution efforts.
  • A Political Challenge: The author argues that spreading wealth is a political challenge, not a policy or economic one. However, the sources also include a dissenting perspective from the discussion section, where a commenter describes this view as "ridiculous" due to the "vicious opposition" to even modest redistribution in the U.S..

Wage Subsidies to Support Human Work

Because work is considered vital for the "human spirit and general well-being," the sources propose specific interventions to keep humans employed.

  • Increasing Returns and Demand: The author’s preferred policy is the wage subsidy, which increases the returns to work for the employee while simultaneously increasing the demand for work from the employer.
  • Boosting Low-Wage Roles: A wage subsidy essentially converts existing demand for labor into "much more demand" and raises the pay for relatively low-paying, human-touch jobs.

The Human Touch as a Policy Foundation

The effectiveness of these policies relies on the concept that the human touch is a "normal good"—meaning demand for it increases as society becomes wealthier.

  • Counterbalancing Automation: If redistribution is successful, a wealthier population will naturally create a "surge in demand" for human-intensive services like fine dining, luxury goods, and personal training, which helps offset jobs lost to AI.
  • Baseline Demand: The sources emphasize that for wage subsidies to work, there must be an "unwavering demand" for human labor to begin with. The inherent preference for human interaction provides this floor, allowing policymakers to focus on boosting demand and raising pay rather than creating work from nothing.

Economic Re-segmentation

Reflecting on the broader discussion, some suggest that policy and market forces may lead to a re-segmentation of the economy. In this scenario, AI becomes the default for lower-end, high-friction services, while human-delivered experiences are re-segmented as premium goods centered around trust and social signaling.


The sources provide a foundation for economic optimism regarding AI by arguing that a "constant, unwavering demand" for the human touch ensures that human labor will remain essential, even as automation capabilities advance.

The Human Touch as a Buffer Against Automation

The primary reason for optimism is the observation that technology has already been capable of automating many roles for decades, yet humans continue to do them.

  • Historical Resilience: The sources point to the music industry, where the invention of the player piano (1895) and recorded music (1877) failed to eliminate live performance. Today, there are over 200,000 employed musicians in the U.S.—the highest number since 1850—because listeners simply prefer music from a human over an "automaton".
  • Service Industry Persistence: Despite the existence of tabletop ordering systems like Ziosk for over a decade, there are still 1.9 million waiters in the U.S.. The sources argue that humans provide a signal of quality and ambience that automation cannot replicate, particularly for high-income customers.

Economic Theory: The "Normal Good"

The sources categorize the human touch as a "normal good," which means that demand for it increases as income rises.

  • Wealth-Driven Demand: If AI-driven productivity gains make the country wealthier per capita, that wealth will likely be spent on human-intensive experiences like fine dining, luxury services, handmade goods, and personal trainers.
  • A "Virtuous Cycle": This creates a self-correcting mechanism where the wealth generated by AI directly fuels a "surge in demand" for new human-touch jobs, helping to counterbalance those lost to automation.

Policy-Enabled Optimism

The sources suggest that the challenge of AI is a political one rather than a fundamental economic one, which is viewed as a "surmountable challenge".

  • Fiscal Space for Redistribution: Because AI increases overall productivity, it creates the "fiscal space" necessary to fund policies like income redistribution to offset inequality.
  • Wage Subsidies: The author proposes wage subsidies as a tool to increase both the returns for workers and the demand for labor from employers. This policy is only viable because the "human touch" ensures there is baseline demand to build upon.

Re-segmentation of the Labor Market

A final reason for optimism found in the discussion is the idea that AI will re-segment rather than eliminate work. While AI may become the default for lower-end, "high-friction" services, human-delivered experiences will likely become premium goods centered around trust, presence, and social signaling. This allows human work to persist in a specialized, high-value tier of the economy.