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Six Gemini agents ran autonomously through 35 research tasks covering falsifiability, retrocausality, consciousness, game theory, agricultural revolution, meaning crisis, AI cost curves, adoption S-curves, and more. 304KB of primary-source research with scholars, counterarguments, and data. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
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6.7 KiB
Task 10: The Economics of Free Cognition — Post-Scarcity Models
Executive Summary
As AI "crashes the price of cognition," economic theory suggests we are approaching a "zero marginal cost" regime for information-based labor. Historical precedents like the mechanization of agriculture (notably China's 1980-2020 transition) and the arrival of cheap electricity show that while productivity explodes, the transition is defined by social disruption and the "ratchet" of new dependencies. Key findings include:
- The Paradox of Abundance: Capitalism requires scarcity to function (price discovery); when marginal costs hit zero, the market logic fails, leading to either "PostCapitalism" (Mason) or "Fully Automated Luxury Communism" (Bastani).
- The Keynesian Gap: We have the wealth Keynes predicted for 2030, but not the 15-hour workweek. This is due to the rise of Positional Goods (status competition) and Bullshit Jobs (administrative bloat to maintain social order).
- Succesor Bottlenecks: In a world of infinite cognition, Human Attention and Biological Trust become the only truly scarce resources.
Key Scholars and Works
- Jeremy Rifkin (The Zero Marginal Cost Society, 2014): Argues that the "Productivity Paradox" (efficiency undermining profit) forces a shift from a market exchange economy to a "Collaborative Commons."
- Paul Mason (PostCapitalism, 2015): Posits that information goods break the price mechanism because they can be replicated infinitely for free, requiring a new economic structure.
- David Graeber (Bullshit Jobs, 2018): Anthropological thesis that we create meaningless work to preserve the social control mechanism of "employment" even when technology makes the work unnecessary.
- Herbert Simon / Tim Wu: Foundational theorists of the Attention Economy, identifying attention as the ultimate bottleneck once information is free.
- John Maynard Keynes (Economic Possibilities for our Grandchildren, 1930): The original post-scarcity prediction; correctly guessed wealth levels but failed to account for "insatiable" positional desires.
Supporting Evidence
1. The Marginal Cost of Cognition
- Token Economics: Frontier models (GPT-4, Claude 3.5) have seen 10x-100x price drops in API costs per million tokens within 24 months. This is the "Moore's Law of Thought."
- Dematerialization: Peter Diamandis notes that billion-dollar 1980s infrastructure (GPS, supercomputers, encyclopedia, video cameras) is now "free" inside a standard smartphone.
2. Historical Parallels: The Agriculture Transition
- China (1980-2020): Shifted from 85% of the population in farming to ~22%.
- Mechanization Ratchet: Grain output increased while labor decreased. The "surplus" was absorbed by urban manufacturing, but the transition required massive state-led infrastructure (the hukou system) to manage the social disruption.
- Wage Surge: Once the labor surplus was absorbed, agricultural wages surged (12% annual growth), forcing further mechanization—a recursive feedback loop.
3. The Baumol's Cost Disease Counter-Pattern
- Sectors resistant to AI automation (healthcare, elder care, elite education) will see their prices soar relative to automated goods, potentially creating a "Two-Tier" society where everything digital is free, but everything biological is prohibitively expensive.
Counterarguments and Critiques
- The Status Ratchet: Humans do not want "enough"; they want "more than their neighbors." Positional goods (real estate in specific ZIP codes, Ivy League degrees) cannot be automated, ensuring that economic struggle continues even in abundance.
- Energy and Compute Caps: Post-scarcity assumes infinite energy and silicon. The IMF notes that AI energy needs could triple by 2030, suggesting a physical floor to the "zero cost" of cognition.
- Efficient Inefficiency: Graeber's critique suggests that we will simply invent "Bullshit Jobs 2.0" (e.g., AI output auditors, prompt compliance managers) to keep the 40-hour week alive.
Historical Parallels and Case Studies
- Cheap Electricity (1920s): When electricity became a utility, it didn't just make things brighter; it reorganized the factory floor (from central steam shafts to individual motors), leading to a 30-year lag in productivity gains while the human systems caught up.
- The Internet (1990s): Distribution of information became free. This didn't eliminate the news; it destroyed the business model of the news, shifting power from creators to platforms (Google/Meta). AI is likely to do the same to the creators of cognition.
Data Points
- 40-60%: Exposure of jobs to AI-driven change in advanced economies (IMF, 2024).
- $2.6T - $4.4T: Annual economic value potentially added by GenAI (McKinsey).
- 58%: Reduction in risk of cognitive decline for seniors using digital tech (Washington Post).
- 37%: Percentage of British workers who believe their jobs provide no meaningful contribution to the world (YouGov/Graeber).
Connections to the Series
- Paper 005 (Cognitive Surplus): This research identifies the specific economic models (Luxury Communism, PostCapitalism) that attempt to capture the surplus AI generates.
- Paper 006 (The Feedback Loop): The "Bullshit Jobs" thesis explains why the feedback loop doesn't immediately result in leisure: the system self-corrects to maintain the "Work-for-Identity" ratchet.
- Paper 007 (The Ratchet): The transition of "Intelligence as a Service" (Diamandis) into a utility like electricity makes AI a "locked-in" infrastructure. Once a company replaces its junior analysts with AI agents, it can never "go back" to humans because the cost-basis has been permanently lowered.
Rabbit Holes Worth Pursuing
- Positional Goods in the Singularity: If AI can generate a "perfect" movie or painting, does value shift exclusively to "human-made" artifacts as status signals?
- The "Hukou" of the AI Era: What are the institutional barriers (licensing, compute permits) that will prevent rural/unskilled populations from accessing the cognitive surplus?
- UBI Failure Modes: Research into why UBI trials (Finland, Stockton) often show improved health but minimal change in "productive" output.
Sources
- Rifkin, J. (2014). The Zero Marginal Cost Society. Palgrave Macmillan.
- Mason, P. (2015). PostCapitalism: A Guide to Our Future. Allen Lane.
- Bastani, A. (2019). Fully Automated Luxury Communism. Verso.
- Graeber, D. (2018). Bullshit Jobs: A Theory. Simon & Schuster.
- McKinsey Global Institute (2023). "The economic potential of generative AI: The next productivity frontier."
- Keynes, J. M. (1930). "Economic Possibilities for our Grandchildren."