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Economy
Related: About this forumThis economic idea transfixed Wall Street and Washington. It may be a mirage.
This economic idea transfixed Wall Street and Washington. It may be a mirage.
Massive investment in AI contributed basically zero to U.S. economic growth last year, Goldman Sachs has calculated.
February 23, 2026 at 5:00 a.m. EST Today at 5:00 a.m. EST
7 min
By Shira Ovide
A new economic indicator has captivated Silicon Valley, Wall Street and Washington.
Technology companies massive spending on artificial intelligence accounted for half or more of U.S. growth last year, some economists calculated, effectively propping up an otherwise anemic economy.
35 Comments
{paywall}
Massive investment in AI contributed basically zero to U.S. economic growth last year, Goldman Sachs has calculated.
February 23, 2026 at 5:00 a.m. EST Today at 5:00 a.m. EST
7 min
By Shira Ovide
A new economic indicator has captivated Silicon Valley, Wall Street and Washington.
Technology companies massive spending on artificial intelligence accounted for half or more of U.S. growth last year, some economists calculated, effectively propping up an otherwise anemic economy.
35 Comments
{paywall}
2 replies
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This economic idea transfixed Wall Street and Washington. It may be a mirage. (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
4 hrs ago
OP
LakeVermilion
(1,546 posts)1. Of course it did.
Our economy is stuck in neutral. Not addressing immigration in a meaningful way is going to bring a lot of pain to our economy. Deportation is a gimmick with no thought about the consequences.
progree
(12,859 posts)2. Link ... and what I'm getting from the full article
https://archive.ph/IgY4W
What's spent on AI in the U.S., like for building data centers, minus the imported part of that (a lot of the chips are Asian-made), is counted as GDP in the official GDP calculation, whether or not it produces any economic benefit,
What's being spent on AI is debatable within a wide range, so it's part of the disagreement about its contribution to the GDP number.
What's spent on AI in the U.S., like for building data centers, minus the imported part of that (a lot of the chips are Asian-made), is counted as GDP in the official GDP calculation, whether or not it produces any economic benefit,
What's being spent on AI is debatable within a wide range, so it's part of the disagreement about its contribution to the GDP number.
Technology companies massive spending on artificial intelligence accounted for half or more of U.S. growth last year, some economists calculated, effectively propping up an otherwise anemic economy.
. . . This is a big deal, but not the be-all and end-all, said Joseph Politano, an economic analyst who writes the Apricitas Economics newsletter. He calculates that AI-related spending contributed about 0.2 percentage points to the 2.2 percent U.S. economic growth last year. . . . AI is a special case, because so much is imported, he said. . . . Five leading U.S. technology companies are expected to spend a combined $700 billion this year on AI infrastructure and other major projects
. . . Rubinton at the St. Louis Fed co-wrote an analysis that concluded AI-related business spending contributed about 39 percent of U.S. economic growth through the first nine months of 2025.
She stands by that calculation but acknowledges that it is probably the maximum possible economic boost related to AI. The tally included spending on software, computers and research that wasnt necessarily all related to AI. On Friday, after the release of a government estimate of economic growth for all of 2025 ((2.2% -progree)), Rubinton said her analysis broadly stood.
. . . This is a big deal, but not the be-all and end-all, said Joseph Politano, an economic analyst who writes the Apricitas Economics newsletter. He calculates that AI-related spending contributed about 0.2 percentage points to the 2.2 percent U.S. economic growth last year. . . . AI is a special case, because so much is imported, he said. . . . Five leading U.S. technology companies are expected to spend a combined $700 billion this year on AI infrastructure and other major projects
. . . Rubinton at the St. Louis Fed co-wrote an analysis that concluded AI-related business spending contributed about 39 percent of U.S. economic growth through the first nine months of 2025.
She stands by that calculation but acknowledges that it is probably the maximum possible economic boost related to AI. The tally included spending on software, computers and research that wasnt necessarily all related to AI. On Friday, after the release of a government estimate of economic growth for all of 2025 ((2.2% -progree)), Rubinton said her analysis broadly stood.