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Nobel Winner Doubles Down on AI Skepticism as ‘Maintenance’ Manifesto Urges Radical Repair

Last updated: 2026-05-13 14:06:39 · Software Tools

Nobel Economist’s Cautious AI View Endures

Daron Acemoglu, the 2024 Nobel Prize winner in economics, is standing by his controversial prediction that artificial intelligence will deliver only a modest boost to U.S. productivity — and will not eliminate the need for human workers. In a new interview with MIT Technology Review, Acemoglu said recent AI advances have not changed his thesis, despite Silicon Valley’s relentless hype.

Nobel Winner Doubles Down on AI Skepticism as ‘Maintenance’ Manifesto Urges Radical Repair
Source: www.technologyreview.com

“The data still largely supports my original estimate,” Acemoglu said. “We are not seeing the transformative leaps that proponents claim, and the risks of job displacement remain limited.” His 2024 paper, which argued AI would add only a small fraction to GDP growth, drew sharp criticism from tech leaders who see the technology as a panacea.

Two years later, Acemoglu points to three key areas he is watching: labor market adaptation, the pace of automation, and the concentration of AI benefits among a few giant firms. He warns that without structural changes, AI could exacerbate inequality rather than drive shared prosperity.

Radical Maintenance: A New Manifesto

In a separate but timely development, counterculture icon Stewart Brand has released a new book arguing that maintenance is a radical, civilizational act. In Maintenance: Of Everything, Part One, Brand contends that taking responsibility for preserving things — from motorcycles to monuments to the planet — has been undervalued in a culture obsessed with innovation.

“Maintainers haven’t gotten the laurels they deserve,” Brand says in the book, which draws on decades of environmental and tech activism. Yet Virginia Tech professor Lee Vinsel, who reviewed the book, notes that Brand’s vision feels “solitary” at times, more focused on personal fulfillment than collective action.

Vinsel, cofounder of The Maintainers research group, calls the work “handsome and thought-provoking,” but says it misses an opportunity to champion shared stewardship. The book appears in MIT Technology Review’s latest print edition, which centers on nature and sustainability.

Nobel Winner Doubles Down on AI Skepticism as ‘Maintenance’ Manifesto Urges Radical Repair
Source: www.technologyreview.com

Background

The two stories converge on a theme of recalibrating expectations. Acemoglu’s measured take has not caught on in Silicon Valley, where AI spending has surged. Meanwhile, Brand’s manifesto challenges the narrative that constant disruption is the only path forward. Both thinkers urge a more balanced relationship with technology — one that accounts for human labor and the longevity of our built and natural environments.

Acemoglu, a professor at MIT, won the Nobel for his work on the role of institutions in economic growth. His AI skepticism has earned him few fans in the tech world, but his data-driven analysis continues to influence policy debates. Brand, a former editor of the Whole Earth Catalog, is a legendary figure in the tech-counterculture intersection, having helped shape the internet’s early ethos.

What This Means

The implications are twofold: First, investors and policymakers should temper claims that AI will revolutionize the economy overnight. Acemoglu’s research suggests that real gains will require complementary investments in human skills and institutional reform. Second, the cultural celebration of repair and maintenance — as championed by Brand — could shift public priorities toward sustainability and infrastructure, away from purely technological novelty.

For businesses, the message is clear: don’t bet everything on AI’s short-term payoff, and don’t ignore the radical power of careful maintenance. As Acemoglu puts it, “The future of work is not just about algorithms. It’s about people, and the systems that support them.”