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Blir AI en vändpunkt i historien? Ekonomipris kan ge fingervisning

(Anders Wiklund/TT / TT NYHETSBYRÅN)

Vilka faktorer gör att teknologisk utveckling kan leda till hållbar tillväxt? Och hur påverkas det av ”kreativ förstörelse”? Det har årets ekonomipristagare Joel Mokyr, Philippe Aghion och Peter Howitt forskat om.

Priskommittén hade sannolikt AI i åtanke, skriver Barron’s. De senaste årens utveckling inom AI kan vara just en sådan vändpunkt i historien som slår ut äldre teknik eller kunskap – och skapar oanade effekter för framtiden. Dessutom talar USA:s stabila innovationssystem för fortsatt omvälvning inom tekniksektorn.

Barron's

What The Latest Nobel Prize Can Tell Us About the Future of AI

By Adam Levine

Barron’s, 14 October 2025

In the year of artificial intelligence, it’s fitting that the latest Nobel Prize is all about understanding new technologies.

On Monday, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences awarded the 2025 Nobel Prize in economics to Joel Mokyr, Philippe Aghion, and Peter Howitt. Their work on the economics of technological innovation is timely and foundational to understanding how AI could change the economic landscape.

“This year’s laureates both explain how innovations feed into sustained economic growth, and how a regime emerged in which new products and processes are continuously introduced in the marketplace despite the conflicting interests they create,” the selection committee said in explaining their decision.

The three laureates help us understand how we’ve reached our current state of technology.

Joel Mokyr of Northwestern University, speaks at his home after winning the Nobel prize in economics, Monday, Oct. 13, 2025. (Nam Y. Huh / AP)

Before the industrial revolution, economic growth stagnated for centuries. Since then, though, advanced economies have seen comparatively sustained growth. Mokyr is an economic historian, and his work focused on the reason for that shift. In his telling, science and the practical knowledge of industrial production began a virtuous cycle that continues through today.

Scientists do basic research and produce knowledge that on its own doesn’t impact economic growth. Technologists and capitalists take that science and turn it into new products, services, and business processes, creating the wealth that funds new scientific inquiry through private and public grants. Mokyr says the 19th century brought a new culture of openness to science and technology, despite the threat to established interests that they bring.

The work of Aghion and Howitt takes up the story from there, theoretically describing the “creative destruction” of moments like today, when the technological landscape is shifting under our feet, unsettling the largest players.

France's Philippe Aghion arrives for an interview with the Associated Press after winning the Nobel prize in economics, Monday, Oct. 13, 2025 in Paris. (Thibault Camus / AP)

Technological innovations undermine the advantages that incumbent companies have, and they allow new companies to steal business from them. Aghion and Howitt’s work took the idea of creative destruction, which was already familiar to economists, and peered into the nuts-and-bolts of it. Their work, and that of other economists who followed, has been the go-to policy framework for encouraging innovation.

The U.S has a particularly dynamic economy with high rates of job and firm creation and destruction happening at the same time. This churn is the result of a bundle of policies and institutions that encourage innovation at the firm level, and protects yesterday’s innovators without making them entrenched.

The Nobel committee members were likely thinking about AI when they awarded the prize. The technology has brought one of those inflection points when new companies have a chance to supplant incumbent powers, the same way the incumbents were once challengers. Mainframe computers were disrupted by PCs, which were disrupted by the World Wide Web, which was disrupted by smartphones. The incumbents don’t go away, but the new entrants can race past them.

This photo courtesy of Katherine Howitt shows Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences winner Brown University Professor Peter Howitt on Monday, Oct. 13, 2025. (Pat Howitt / AP)

Now, all of it is being disrupted by AI in ways not fully understood at this early stage. Private investors are counting on this disruption; since 2024, they have funded AI start-ups with $259 billion, according to Crunchbase. Big Tech companies are defending their turf, also spending hundreds of billions to stave off irrelevance in the AI age.

Aghion and Howitt lay out seven ingredients that enable the innovation flywheel: a balanced competition, patent protection that doesn’t go too far, support for higher education, finance innovation, countercyclical fiscal policy, open trade, and productive bankruptcy laws that efficiently reallocate capital and labor.

A few of those ingredients are being challenged by new Trump administration policies, but most of America’s innovation framework remains in place and that suggests continued upheaval among tech businesses, with new tech giants emerging and some going away.

OpenAI is making an early bid to become a colossus in the AI age, but many of these new companies may not yet be on anyone’s radar, and some might not even exist.

To the latest Nobel laureates, that’s exactly how it should be.

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