WASHINGTON (AP) 鈥 America has been rushing into an without much of a plan to stop what could be .
Critics warn of out of a sci-fi thriller, while will generate so much new wealth that no one should worry too much about .
A new bipartisan nonprofit hopes to ensure that America can realize the economic gains promised by AI without its workers suffering.
RAISE US is starting with more than $500 million to deploy on new forms of , putting a focus on partnering with states and major employers rather than the federal government.
Founded by former Commerce Secretary , a Democrat, and former Indiana Gov. , a Republican, the group aims to pilot programs and incentives to help American workers pivot to new careers in an economy that will increasingly be automated by artificial intelligence.
鈥淲e鈥檙e talking about a certain level of unemployment that could destabilize our country and our democracy,鈥 Raimondo said in an interview. 鈥淚f you want to lead the world in AI, you have to take action to make sure our democracy doesn鈥檛 crumble.鈥
The programs will first start in Arkansas, Maryland, Utah and Connecticut
The nonprofit is initially partnering with officials in Arkansas, Connecticut, Maryland and Utah, along with several of America’s largest companies and charitable organizations. The group intends to develop policies that connect schools more closely to employers, so that layoffs can be replaced by the potential for new jobs with higher incomes. They also are exploring changes to corporate taxes and other incentives with the goal of keeping people working.
鈥淕ood things tend to happen when you convert have-nots into haves,鈥 Holcomb said.
Among the companies serving as anchor partners with RAISE US are Amazon, Microsoft, , the OpenAI Foundation and Bank of America. Other employers involved in the project include UPS, General Motors, Eli Lilly, Mastercard, chipmaker AMD, Cisco and IBM.
Raimondo, the former Democratic governor of Rhode Island who played a formative role in setting AI policy as the Biden administration鈥檚 commerce secretary, will be the nonprofit鈥檚 CEO.
The advisory board includes former Republican House Speaker , billionaire investment manager , AFL-CIO President and the economists David Autor, Erik Brynjolfsson and Raj Chetty.
AI has the potential to displace human workers from factories to offices
An April analysis by the Boston Consulting Group estimated that roughly half of U.S. jobs will be reshaped by AI over the next few years. The analysis said that as many as 25 million jobs could be eliminated in the U.S. over the next five years. Goldman Sachs, in March, separately released an estimate that a quarter of U.S. work hours could be automated by AI.
More than just a glorified search engine or a generator of video clips and novelty images, AI could fill roads with driverless trucks, create factories staffed by robots and supplant .
President has expressed little anxiety about the possibility of AI displacing human workers.
Asked on Tuesday ahead of touring a if AI could cause truckers to lose their jobs, Trump told a reporter, 鈥淩ight now, they鈥檙e not.鈥
The president has been banking on the and power plants to drive hiring and overall economic growth. While have helped the economy, and the trucking transportation sector has cut 28,300 jobs since the start of Trump鈥檚 second term, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
鈥淲e have, right now, so many jobs that are going to be available and the biggest problem we have is getting the people,鈥 Trump said. 鈥淪o we鈥檙e really doing spectacular.鈥
Experts say education systems and labor policies aren’t built for an AI economy
AI experts have warned of gaps between the transformations that AI could create and a 20th century social safety net of unemployment insurance and four-year college that seems ill-prepared for the scope, scale and speed of the change.
鈥淎I is now disrupting multiple sectors simultaneously, faster than any institution can respond,鈥 said Vivienne Ming, a neuroscientist who has written the book, 鈥淩obot-Proof: When Machines Have all the Answers, Build Better People.鈥
Ming said that she agrees with an argument by economists that the wealth generated by AI could create demand for more workers that could offset any job losses. But she said the skills that matter in an AI economy go beyond professions such as plumbing or construction and involve curiosity and intellectual flexibility.
鈥淣either our education system nor our labor policies are building the foundational human capital that AI-era work actually requires,鈥 she said.
Raimondo said the new nonprofit wants to use states as a vehicle for testing ideas that Congress can later embrace as policies, paving the way for the possibility of more profound changes to both the tax code and the educational system.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 have a lot of hope for bold action by Congress in the next few years on this issue, and I don鈥檛 think we can wait a few years,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 also think there are many examples in history that when the federal government does take action, they will look around at what has been working in states. I feel pretty confident that they will look at the work that we鈥檝e done.鈥
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