Response to Paul Krugman: From Scarcity Economics to Abundance Economics – The AI and Robotics Paradigm Shift
Paul Krugman’s latest Substack piece, “Technology, Capital and Skills,” offers a thoughtful, historically grounded reflection on AI’s potential effects on labor, capital returns, and skill premiums. Drawing on Ricardo’s evolving views during the Industrial Revolution, Krugman revisits whether we face capital-biased technological change that could suppress wages even as output rises, and he expresses growing concern about how AI might devalue many traditionally rewarded human skills.
These are valid questions within the familiar framework of scarcity economics. However, they risk missing the deeper transformation underway. AI and advanced robotics are not merely another wave of productivity-enhancing tools like steam engines, electricity, or computers. They represent a qualitative break: technologies capable of ending generalized economic scarcity as we have known it. This renders much of the discipline we call “economics”—built on allocation under constraints—obsolescent in the long run. The eventuality is abundance economics, a new paradigm. The central challenge is not debating wage shares or skill premiums inside the old box, but engineering a smooth public policy transition out of it.Why AI and Robotics Are DifferentPast technologies augmented human labor or substituted for specific tasks, but they still operated within scarcity. They required ongoing human input, scarce raw materials allocated by markets or planners, and faced natural limits on energy, coordination, and intelligence. Capital and skilled labor remained bottlenecks; technological progress often raised overall wealth while shifting relative returns (sometimes hurting workers in the short-to-medium term, as Ricardo came to acknowledge).
AI and robotics, especially in combination, erode these foundations:
In abundance economics, the binding constraints shift from production to distribution, meaning-making, creativity in a world of plenty, environmental limits (which intelligence helps manage), and human flourishing. GDP and wage statistics become less central metrics. The old questions—“Will AI drive down wages?” or “Who gets the capital returns?”—remain relevant during transition but miss the destination.The Transition Challenge Is Public Policy, Not Just MarketsKrugman and mainstream analysis rightly worry about disruption: capital concentration, skill obsolescence, inequality, and potential labor displacement. These are real. But attempts to solve them by tweaking scarcity-era tools—more education, retraining, marginal tax adjustments, or hoping for new comparative advantages—stay trapped in the old box. You cannot navigate to abundance by optimizing scarcity assumptions.
A smooth transition requires deliberate public policy that acknowledges the destination:
Krugman notes his views have evolved with new evidence on AI, as Ricardo’s did. Economists should similarly evolve beyond marginal analysis of capital bias and skill premiums toward modeling post-scarcity dynamics, even if imperfectly. The data on AI progress—rapid capability gains, falling costs, broad applicability—points toward abundance as the logical horizon, not perpetual zero-sum distributional fights.
The box of scarcity economics served humanity well in raising us from Malthusian conditions. AI and robotics let us step outside it. Recognizing that shift is the first, essential step to a successful transition. The policy choices we make today will determine whether we get shared abundance or new forms of artificial scarcity and division. Let’s choose the former.
Paul Krugman’s latest Substack piece, “Technology, Capital and Skills,” offers a thoughtful, historically grounded reflection on AI’s potential effects on labor, capital returns, and skill premiums. Drawing on Ricardo’s evolving views during the Industrial Revolution, Krugman revisits whether we face capital-biased technological change that could suppress wages even as output rises, and he expresses growing concern about how AI might devalue many traditionally rewarded human skills.
These are valid questions within the familiar framework of scarcity economics. However, they risk missing the deeper transformation underway. AI and advanced robotics are not merely another wave of productivity-enhancing tools like steam engines, electricity, or computers. They represent a qualitative break: technologies capable of ending generalized economic scarcity as we have known it. This renders much of the discipline we call “economics”—built on allocation under constraints—obsolescent in the long run. The eventuality is abundance economics, a new paradigm. The central challenge is not debating wage shares or skill premiums inside the old box, but engineering a smooth public policy transition out of it.Why AI and Robotics Are DifferentPast technologies augmented human labor or substituted for specific tasks, but they still operated within scarcity. They required ongoing human input, scarce raw materials allocated by markets or planners, and faced natural limits on energy, coordination, and intelligence. Capital and skilled labor remained bottlenecks; technological progress often raised overall wealth while shifting relative returns (sometimes hurting workers in the short-to-medium term, as Ricardo came to acknowledge).
AI and robotics, especially in combination, erode these foundations:
- Cognitive and physical substitution at scale: They handle not just routine tasks but complex reasoning, creativity, planning, and dexterous execution. As capabilities compound, the marginal cost of additional “labor” (inference, actuation) approaches zero for many goods and services.
- Self-improvement and replication: AI systems can design better AI and robots; robots can build more robots. This creates positive feedback loops unlike prior tech.
- Dematerialization and efficiency: Better intelligence optimizes resource use, energy, logistics, and innovation itself—potentially decoupling growth from physical constraints.
In abundance economics, the binding constraints shift from production to distribution, meaning-making, creativity in a world of plenty, environmental limits (which intelligence helps manage), and human flourishing. GDP and wage statistics become less central metrics. The old questions—“Will AI drive down wages?” or “Who gets the capital returns?”—remain relevant during transition but miss the destination.The Transition Challenge Is Public Policy, Not Just MarketsKrugman and mainstream analysis rightly worry about disruption: capital concentration, skill obsolescence, inequality, and potential labor displacement. These are real. But attempts to solve them by tweaking scarcity-era tools—more education, retraining, marginal tax adjustments, or hoping for new comparative advantages—stay trapped in the old box. You cannot navigate to abundance by optimizing scarcity assumptions.
A smooth transition requires deliberate public policy that acknowledges the destination:
- Decouple human welfare from traditional employment: As AI handles more production, we need robust mechanisms like expanded social dividends, public provisioning of basics, or forms of universal basic services/income. These are not “handouts” but logical claims on the enormous surplus generated by automated abundance. Pilot programs and experiments should accelerate, not dismissed as politically unrealistic.
- Manage capital and ownership of the means of intelligence: Who owns the AI models, data, compute infrastructure, and robotic fleets? Concentrated private ownership risks rentier dystopia—extreme inequality amid material plenty. Policy options include public stakes in frontier systems, aggressive antitrust/data commons, open-source mandates where safe, or sovereign wealth funds capturing gains for citizens. The goal is broad-based ownership of the new productive base.
- Redefine skills, work, and purpose: Many cognitive and physical skills will be outcompeted. The response cannot be “upskill everyone into the remaining scarce roles” (there will be fewer of them). Societies must invest in education for creativity, care, community, science, and the arts—domains where human meaning persists even when machines outperform on narrow metrics. Shorter workweeks, sabbaticals, and cultural infrastructure become higher priorities.
- Handle the pacing and safety: Rapid, unmanaged deployment risks chaos. Coordinated policy on deployment timelines, safety standards, and international norms (to avoid destructive races) matters. Abundance is not inevitable on a desirable timeline without steering.
Krugman notes his views have evolved with new evidence on AI, as Ricardo’s did. Economists should similarly evolve beyond marginal analysis of capital bias and skill premiums toward modeling post-scarcity dynamics, even if imperfectly. The data on AI progress—rapid capability gains, falling costs, broad applicability—points toward abundance as the logical horizon, not perpetual zero-sum distributional fights.
The box of scarcity economics served humanity well in raising us from Malthusian conditions. AI and robotics let us step outside it. Recognizing that shift is the first, essential step to a successful transition. The policy choices we make today will determine whether we get shared abundance or new forms of artificial scarcity and division. Let’s choose the former.
Scarcity Economics To Abundance Economics And A Smooth Transition https://t.co/ugPvaVkJGn @paulkrugman @pmarca @elonmusk
— Paramendra Kumar Bhagat (@paramendra) June 21, 2026
Why AI Makes Scarcity Economics Obsolete https://t.co/tQc8c4ByWz @paulkrugman @pmarca @elonmusk
— Paramendra Kumar Bhagat (@paramendra) June 21, 2026
