After many conversations over past year with friends, business associates & policymakers about the future of AI job disruption, I’ve tried to get my thoughts in order. With the caveat that I have no specific AI expertise, here they are. Comments and corrections encouraged.🧵
1/n
AI coding tools crossed an important threshold over the past year with release of Anthropic's Claude Code. Previously, largely sophisticated autocomplete systems that created code snippets, they’re now agents capable of completing substantial engineering tasks.
2/n
Developers were shocked at how good the tools were. Those previously skeptical of AI coding did a 180. Very quickly, the role of many software engineers began to change, shifting from writing code themselves to supervising, directing, and reviewing the work of coding agents.
3/n
AI coding tools had been improving for years, and adoption was growing, but it was slow. The tools were useful but limited. For specific tasks they could save time but that didn't generalize across broader workflows. That changed when the tech crossed a critical threshold.
4/n
With a single release cycle, AI coding became good enough to be broadly useful, and adoption skyrocketed. Anthropic's preferred revenue metric exploded from an annualized $3 bln in May '25 to $47 bln one year later, historic growth never seen in any business before.
5/n
Many tech firms responded with layoffs in 2026, some specifically citing AI coding. There is debate about how many jobs AI has actually displaced. Some companies were already overstaffed and their CEOs gained social cred within tech circles by claiming to be early adopter.
6/n
Some companies were trying to become leaner to accelerate employee adoption of AI. Others were shifting capital toward AI. And there has probably been some genuine AI-driven job displacement. Regardless, nearly every tech firm believes much larger disruption is coming soon.
7/n
Those in coding are freaking out. If models improved this much just in past year, what does next year look like? There is high confidence that AI will structurally disrupt the job of coding. There is active debate about the # of future coding jobs. Jevon's Paradox yada yada.
8/n
The bigger question is whether software is merely the first domino. If models crossing the threshold of "good enough" created this much disruption in coding, which fields are next? AI maximalists, who are increasingly influential in Silicon Valley, believe the answer is many.
9/n
In their view, substantial white-collar job displacement could arrive in the near term, with blue-collar disruption following as robotics improves. This is where the debate gets interesting.
10/n
There are several reasons software was likely disrupted first: 1) The work is already digital and performed through text 2) Coding has tight feedback loops that allow for easy testing of whether the AI output worked
11/n
3) Massive training datasets exist through gajillions of lines of publicly available code 4) Tech workers are natural early adopters of new tech tools
12/n
5) There is little real-world friction to adoption in software, like regulations 6) Software employees are highly paid so there is strong incentive to automate their work
13/n
Taken together, software may be close to the ideal environment for AI adoption. The key question is whether other professions share enough of those characteristics for a similar pattern to emerge.
14/n
Though professions like customer support, translation, and some back-office share some of these characteristics, most do not. Will AI-driven disruption across the broader economy arrive in the near-term, medium-term, long-term, or never?
15/n
Most AI maximalists who are well informed on AI think the world will look very different in 2-3 years than it does today. Like very, very different. They believe economy might be unrecognizable in 5 years and that policymakers must start preparing today for the disruption.
16/n
Those outside of tech see the many frictions and constraints on adoption in other industries and come to a different conclusion. They're more likely to see AI as a sustaining technology, improving productivity but not fundamentally changing the nature of most professions.
17/n
They point to regulation, liability, inertia, customer preferences, physical constraints, and legacy systems as barriers that slow adoption in the real world. And they point out that most jobs are not simply a collection of repeatable tasks but are something more complex.
18/n
I don’t know where to come out on it. AI researchers have access to models I don’t and a much greater appreciation for the trajectory of future models. But, many also have less exposure to the physical, regulatory and institutional constraints that shape much of the economy.
19/n
A host of policy responses have been proposed: UBI, wage insurance, taxing AI, workforce retraining, shorter workweeks, expanded social insurance, giving people equity in AI or broader stock market. But it’s hard to know what to do when we don’t know how this plays out.
20/n
The software world crossed an inflection point after models surpassed a certain threshold. Whether the rest of the economy follows remains an open question. It's going to be a fascinating few years to watch. Hopefully, they'll be good years as well.
21/21
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
Cartels are inherently unstable so it's impressive OPEC has endured 66 years. That said, UAE is 4th country to withdraw in past 7 years. One more and it all may unravel. The emergence of US as largest producer has weakened OPEC; geopolitics might kill it. Who might be next?
1/n
Iran: Saudi and Iran are now in direct regional conflict. Saudi has provided logistical support for US operations while Iran is striking their infrastructure with missiles and drones. Iran has been exempt from quotas since 2018 but what's the point of staying in a Saudi-controlled economic and geopolitical group?
2/n
Iraq: By frequently violating its quota, Iraq has undermined the main tool of OPEC and is unlikely to abide in the future given economic fragility. Plus, Iraq is (shockingly) the most stable democracy in a group of mostly authoritarian regimes.
3/n
Hard to overstate the role shale gas has played in lowering inflation and spurring American industry. Were we a net importer today as forecast in the 2000s, domestic nat gas & power would be at multiples of current pricing, serving as a huge tax on individuals and companies.
1/5
Given that commodities are priced at the margin, all US gas would be priced based on int'l markets if still a net importer. That price is $15-20 in Western Europe. Instead, the shale revolution happened and gas in the US is $3, roughly unchanged post-Iran.
via @SStapczynski 2/5
@SStapczynski Since nat gas is the marginal fuel for power generation for many hours each day, electricity prices would be significantly higher as well. People who are unhappy with electricity costs today would be apoplectic at structurally higher prices absent the shale revolution.
3/5
The Atlantic has a sobering, first-person look at the ramifications of legalized online sports betting. Here are a few of the more telling passages. 1/5
Just returned from my first trip to China, mostly looking at the energy and robotics industries. Fascinating. Random observations, both business and general, below...
1/x
The speed to add manufacturing capacity is stunning. Permitting takes weeks. A factory making sophisticated equipment is built in 12 months. An auto plant took 16 months from groundbreaking to first production. Slack in labor market makes it easy to staff and flex employment.
2/x
The US and China have significantly decoupled since early 2020. The # of flights between the two countries is down roughly 70%. Two long-term residents I spoke with said the # of American expats is down 50-75% from the peak. The # of Americans studying in China is down ≈90%.
3/x
Have a child going through the selective college admissions process for the first time and the system seems designed specifically to maximize stress for student and parents alike. The process has gotten worse in recent years and will will keep getting worse until it breaks.
1/n
Step 1: Ask a 17-year-old to take a long list of colleges they would be happy to attend and become emotionally committed to just one school for Early Decision because the acceptance rate is higher in the first round, even though odds are they will be rejected.
2/n
If rejected, Step 2: Ask the same teenager to choose a new school from the long list of colleges they’d be happy to attend and become emotionally committed to it through ED2, even though the odds of rejection are even higher than in Step 1.
3/n
Energy costs have tracked inflation historically. That stability is now at risk after scores of projects across every source were cancelled over past decade due to permitting. Without reform, we will not have affordable & reliable energy. A partial list of projects affected:
🧵
Energy projects delayed/cancelled since 2015
Part 1: Nat gas pipelines
1) Atlantic Coast: 1.5 bcf/d, WV-->NC, cancelled
2) Mountain Valley: 2 bcf/d, WV-->VA, delayed
3) PennEast: 1 bcf/d, PA-->NJ, cancelled
4) Constitution: .65 bcf/d, PA-->NY, suspended
Energy projects delayed/cancelled since 2015
Part 2: Transmission Lines
1) New England Clean Connect: 1.2 GW, Quebec<->ME, cancelled
2) Plains & Eastern: 3.5 GW, OK<->TN, cancelled
3) Grain Belt: 5 GW, KS<->IN, suspended
4) TransWest Express: 3 GW, WY<->NV, delayed