Andreessen uses traditional economics to counter the AGI unemployment argument: jobs are not fixed pies.

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Abstract generation in progress

Core Viewpoint

Marc Andreessen believes that the panic over AGI causing mass unemployment is based on an economic fallacy that has been repeatedly disproven for 200 years.

What He Is Saying

Andreessen posted a long thread, with the core argument being the “lump of labor fallacy”: the total amount of work in society is not fixed. Technology does indeed eliminate old jobs, but at the same time, by lowering costs and prices, it releases consumer capacity and investment space, creating new jobs elsewhere.

He cited two old examples: the 19th-century Luddites smashing looms and agriculture shrinking from 90% of the labor force to just 2% today. The implication is that the prophecy of “technology = unemployment” has never come true. For AI investors and entrepreneurs, this amounts to saying: don’t be scared off by the unemployment panic, keep going.

How to View This Matter

His Logical Chain: AI lowers costs → prices drop → people have more money to spend elsewhere → new demand arises → new industries and new jobs emerge. Essentially, it’s applying Say’s Law (supply creates demand) to the AGI era.

Conflict of Interest: Andreessen is a co-founder of a16z, a fund heavily invested in AI. He claims that AI will not lead to a disaster of unemployment, which is obviously beneficial for his investment portfolio. This doesn’t mean what he says is wrong, but it’s worth keeping this point in mind while reading.

Issues He Doesn’t Discuss:

  • Displaced workers will not automatically benefit from new job openings
  • Retraining takes time, and switching cities or industries can be costly
  • The pain during the transition period is real, even if the eventual outcome is positive

Policy Implications: This narrative is often used to argue against strong AI regulation. If this narrative gains traction, the regulatory tone may shift to “let the bullets fly for a while.”

Practical Significance

  • Signal: The discourse is shifting from “protecting jobs” to “pursuing growth”
  • Investment Perspective: Valuations are more likely to be priced according to growth curves rather than layoff stories
  • Corporate Communication: Both internally and externally, companies can emphasize “efficiency and revenue growth” and “new business lines,” instead of just focusing on cost reduction

Importance Assessment

Importance: High | Category: Industry Trends, Market Sentiment

My View: This is an emerging narrative window. It is most beneficial for entrepreneurs who are actively pushing product deployment and for medium to long-term funds. It holds little significance for short-term traders. Teams that can translate productivity improvements into actual revenue will have an advantage by increasing investments now rather than waiting.

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