It seems a lifetime ago, but it was 2017 when the former NBN CEO Mike Quigley and I wrote a book about the impact of technology on our labour market.
Changing Jobs: The Fair Go in the New Machine Age was our attempt to make sense of rapid technological change and its implications for Australian workers.
It sprang from a thinkers’ circle Andrew Charlton and I convened regularly back then, to consider the biggest, most consequential shifts in our economy.
Flicking through the book now makes it very clear that the pace of change since then has been breathtaking.
The stories of Australian tech companies give a sense of its scale.
In 2017, the cloud design pioneer Canva was valued at $US1bn – today, it’s more than $US30bn.
Leading datacentre company AirTrunk was opening its first two centres in Sydney and Melbourne. It now has almost a dozen across Asia-Pacific and is backed by one of the world’s biggest investors.
We understand a churning and changing world is a source of opportunity but also anxiety for Australians.
While the technology has changed, our goal as leaders remains the same.
The responsibility we embrace is to make Australian workers, businesses and investors beneficiaries, not victims, of that change.
That matters more than ever in a new world of artificial intelligence.
The AI ‘hype cycle’
Breakthroughs in “large language models” (LLMs) – computer programs trained on massive datasets that can understand and respond in human languages – have triggered a booming AI “hype cycle” and are driving a “cognitive industrial revolution”.
ChatGPT became a household name in a matter of months and has reframed how we think about working, creating and problem-solving.
LLMs have been adopted seven times faster than the internet and 20 times faster than electricity. The rapid take-up has driven the biggest rise in the S&P 500 since the late 1990s.
According to one US estimate, eight out of 10 workers could use LLMs for at least 10% of their work in future.
Yet businesses are still in the discovery phase, trying to separate hype from reality and determine what AI to build, buy or borrow.
Two huge impacts
Artificial intelligence will completely transform our economy. Every aspect of life will be affected.
I’m optimistic that AI will be a force for good, but realistic about the risks.
The Nobel prize-winning economist Darren Acemoglu estimates that AI could boost productivity by 0.7% over the next decade, but some private sector estimates are up to 30 times higher.
Goldman Sachs expects AI could drive gross domestic product (GDP) growth up 7% over the next 10 years, and PwC estimates it could bump up global GDP by $15.7tn by 2030.
The wide variation in estimates is partly due to different views on how long it will take to integrate AI into business workflows deeply enough to transform the market size or cost base of industries.
But if some of the predictions prove correct, AI may be the most transformative technology in human history.
At its best, it will convert energy into analysis, and more productivity into higher living standards.
It’s expected to have at least two significant economy-wide effects.
First, it reduces the cost of information processing.
One example of this is how eBay’s AI translation tools have removed language barriers to drive international sales. The increase in cross-border trade is the equivalent of having buyers and sellers 26% closer to one another – effectively shrinking the distance between Australia and global markets.
This is one reason why the World Trade Organization forecasts AI will lower trade costs and boost trade volumes by up to 13%.
Second, cheaper analysis accelerates and increases our problem-solving capacity, which can, in turn, speed up innovation by reducing research and development (R&D) costs and skills bottlenecks.
By making more projects stack up commercially, AI is likely to raise investment, boost GDP and generate demand for human expertise.
Concerns over jobs
Despite the potential for AI to create more high-skilled, high-wage jobs, some are concerned that adoption will lead to big increases in unemployment. The impact of AI on the labour force is uncertain, but there are good reasons to be optimistic.
One study finds that more than half of the use cases of LLMs involve workers iterating back and forth with the technology, augmenting workers’ skills in ways that enable them to achieve more.
Another recent study found that current LLMs often automate only some tasks within roles, freeing up employees to add more value rather than reducing hours worked.
These are some of the reasons many expect the AI transformation to enhance skills and change the nature of work, rather than causing widespread or long-term structural unemployment.
Even so, the impact of AI on the nature of work is expected to be substantial.
We’ve seen this play out before – more than half the jobs people do today are in occupations that didn’t even exist at the start of the second world war.
Some economists have suggested AI could increase occupational polarisation – driving a U-shaped increase in demand for manual roles that are harder to automate and high-skill roles that leverage technology, but a reduction in demand for medium-skilled tasks.
But workers in many of these occupations may be able to leverage AI to complete more specialised tasks and take on more productive, higher-paying roles. In this transition, the middle has the most to gain and the most at stake.
There is also a risk that AI could increase short-term unemployment if investment in skills does not keep up with the changing nature of work.
Governments have an important role to play here, and a big motivation for our record investment in education is ensuring that skills keep pace with technological change. But it’s also up to business, unions and the broader community to ensure we continue to build the human capital and skills we need to grasp this opportunity.
Australia’s opportunity
To be optimistic about AI is not to dismiss the risks, which are not limited to the labour market.
The ability of AI to rapidly collate, create and disseminate information and disinformation makes people more vulnerable to fraud and poses a risk to democracies.
AI technologies are also drastically reducing the cost of surveillance and increasing its effectiveness, with implications for privacy, autonomy at work and, in some cases, personal security.
There are questions of ethics, of inequality, of bias in algorithms, and legal responsibility for decision-making when AI is involved.
These new technologies will also put pressure on resources such as energy, land, water and telecoms infrastructure, with implications for carbon emissions.
But we are well placed to manage the risks and maximise the opportunities.
In 2020, Australia was ranked sixth in the world in terms of AI companies and research institutions when accounting for GDP. Our industrial opportunities are vast and varied – from developing AI software to using AI to unlock value in traditional industries.
Markets for AI hardware – particularly chips – and foundational models are quite concentrated. About 70% of the widely used foundational models have been developed in the US, and three US firms claim 65% of the global cloud computing market.
But further downstream, markets for AI software and services are dynamic, fragmented and more competitive. The Productivity Commission sees potential to develop areas of comparative advantage in these markets.
Infrastructure is an obvious place to start.
According to the International Data Corporation, global investment in AI infrastructure increased 97% in the first half of 2024 to $US47bn and is on its way to $US200bn by 2028. We are among the top five global destinations for datacentres and a world leader in quantum computing.
Our landmass, renewable energy potential and trusted international partnerships make us an attractive destination for data processing.
Our substantial agenda, from the capacity investment scheme to the Future Made in Australia plan, will be key to this. They are good examples of our strategy to engage and invest, not protect and retreat.
The way ahead
Our intention is to regulate as much as necessary to protect Australians, but as little as possible to encourage innovation.
There is much work already under way: our investment in quantum computing company PsiQuantum and AI adopt centres, development of Australia’s first voluntary AI safety standard, putting AI on the critical technologies list, a national capability plan, and work on R&D.
Next steps will build on the work of colleagues like the assistant minister for the digital economy, Andrew Charlton, the science minister, Tim Ayres and former science minister Ed Husic, and focus on at least five things:
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Building confidence in AI to accelerate development and adoption in key sectors.
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Investing in and encouraging up skilling and reskilling to support our workforce.
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Helping to attract, streamline, speed up and coordinate investment in data infrastructure that’s in the national interest, in ways that are cost effective, sustainable and make the most of our advantages.
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Promoting fair competition in global markets and building demand and capability locally to secure our influence in AI supply chains.
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And working with the finance minister, Katy Gallagher, to deliver safer and better public services using AI.
Beneficiaries of change
Artificial intelligence will be a key concern of the economic reform roundtable I’m convening this month because it has major implications for economic resilience, productivity and budget sustainability. I’m setting these thoughts out now to explain what we’ll grapple with and how.
AI is contentious, and of course, there is a wide spectrum of views, but we are ambitious and optimistic.
We can deploy AI in a way consistent with our values if we treat it as an enabler, not an enemy, by listening to and training workers to adapt and augment their work.
Because empowering people to use AI well is not just a matter of decency or a choice between prosperity and fairness; it is the only way to get the best out of people and technology at the same time.
It is not beyond us to chart a responsible middle course on AI, which maximises the benefits and manages the risks. Not by letting it rip, and not by turning back the clock and pretending none of this is happening, but by turning algorithms into opportunities for more Australians to be beneficiaries, not victims of a rapid transformation that is gathering pace.