Source: a16z
a16z rehashes a centuries-old economic argument—that job displacement fears rest on a false assumption of fixed work—to dismiss contemporary AI labor concerns. The argument overlooks the actual policy problem: regardless of aggregate job creation, the transition period punishes specific workers and regions while capital captures gains immediately. It works better as historical pattern-matching than as a guide for 2024, where retraining timelines, wage compression in white-collar work, and geographic concentration of AI-driven productivity don't align with the pace at which new jobs emerge.