Predictions for how artificial intelligence technologies will affect future economic outcomes, for good or ill, are all quite dependent on the underlying assumptions. But it’s nonethelss interesting tow see what big international institutions are saying about the future. The recent report from the OECD, Foundations for Growth and Competitiveness 2026, is sweeping in its overview of the topic. Here, I will just focus on the subject of how AI technologies might affect growth.
Here’s an illustrative figure with estimates for seven high-income economies. The light-blue bars are AI-related annual productivity gains over the next decade with a slow-adoption scenario; the darker-blue bars are growth with a faster AI-adoption scenario; and the orange triangles are a medium-adoption scenario.

The OECD report offers some perspective on these growth rates: “For reference, the annual labour productivity growth, on average, has been 0.6% across G7 economies over the last ten years (2014-23), implying a growth-dividend from AI that is close to double the rate of recent productivity growth. In the most optimistic scenario, with fast adoption (as in mobile phones) and expanded AI capabilities, labour productivity gains are estimated at up to 1.3 percentage points, while in the most conservative scenario of slow adoption, they remain significant but at 0.2 to 0.4 points.”
To put it another way, say that AI raises US economic growth at the top end of these estimates, by 1.3% per year. The US GDP will be about $32 trillion this year. So a year from now, the US economy would be $416 billion bigger (that is, 1.3 percentage points) than it would otherwise have been. After 10 years, the GDP would be 13% bigger than it would otherwise have been (actually a bit more than that, because growth rates compound over time). This would be $4.16 trillion larger than the US economy would otherwise have been.
The empirical study underlying this figure, by Francesco Filippucci, Peter Gal, Katharina Laengle and Matthias Schief, is based on three components: “(1) micro-level productivity gains from AI at the task level, (2) the degree of exposure of tasks within sectors to AI, and (3) forecasts of future AI adoption across firms within each sector. To the extent possible, the quantification of these components relies on country-specific assumptions.” For perspective, that earlier paper also provides a range of estimates of the growth effects of AI. (The bars with stripes on top show the range from lower to higher estimates.)

But why are some economies, like the United States, getting a bigger boost from AI than others? Some answer are presented in “Mind the Gap: AI Adoption in Europe and the US,” by Alexander Bick, Adam Blandin, David J. Deming, Nicola Fuchs-Schündeln, and Jonas Jessen (Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, Spring 2026). As a big-picture overview, they point out that US investments in information and communications technologies have been substantially higher since at least the 1990s, and perhaps unsurprisingly, the US edge in output per hour worked has ben expanding since the mid-1990s, too.

But the real heart of their paper is survey data of workers, across countries, about their use of AI. For example, the US has a higher share of workers who report using generative AI tools.

In addition, looking just at the workers who use AI tools, the US workers spend a greater percentage of their work time using those tools.

The survey data from workers also lets the authors look at the personnel management policies across firms (building on questions asked by the World Management Survey). They find that companies and countries which score better on personnel management also tend to have higher AI use. In short, the US economy has a higher share of firms with highly-rated personnel management policies, and thus a higher share of AI users, and thus better prospects for a future AI-related boost in economic growth.









