Fortune | FORTUNE 10月08日
AI 驱动经济增长的真相:经济学家警告潜在的停滞
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知名投资者史蒂夫·艾斯曼警告称,若剔除人工智能(AI)的增长贡献,美国经济将呈现截然不同的景象。他指出,尽管GDP数据可能显示经济强劲,但AI基础设施的大量投入(尤其是来自大型科技公司)占据了大部分增长额。若剥离这部分支出,实际经济增长将微乎其微,甚至可能停滞。同时,其他经济学家和科技巨头也对AI泡沫表示担忧,而不断增长的家庭债务、汽车贷款和学生贷款余额,以及汽车行业的困境,都暗示着消费者正面临压力,预示着经济的潜在脆弱性。

💡 AI 投入主导经济增长:知名投资者史蒂夫·艾斯曼指出,若从美国GDP增长中剔除人工智能(AI)相关的大规模基础设施投资(估算约4000亿美元),实际经济增长将变得微乎其微,仅为50个基点左右,暗示经济增长严重依赖AI领域。

📉 潜在的经济泡沫与消费者压力:包括艾斯曼在内的多位经济学家和科技巨头对AI投资不断增加但尚未显现出颠覆性能力表示担忧。同时,家庭债务、汽车贷款和学生贷款余额的上升,以及汽车行业的困境,都表明消费者正面临显著压力,预示着经济的脆弱性。

🚗 汽车行业为消费者困境提供案例:文章以汽车行业为例,解释了疫情期间的刺激措施如何暂时掩盖了消费者的真实财务状况。高企的汽车价格和后续的库存积压导致新车降价和二手车价格上涨,使得消费者转向维护成本更高的旧车,加剧了他们的财务负担,且车辆的低价值使得银行不愿进行车辆回收。

Billionaire investor Steve Eisman warns of a very different economic reality if one were to remove the gains of AI from the equation.

The financial analyst best known for predicting the 2008 housing collapse—as made famous by the 2015 film “The Big Short”—said in a recent episode of The Real Eisman Playbook podcast that U.S. economy is a “tale of two cities:” While GDP growth may indicate a robust economy, by removing AI expenditures from the picture, you instead see stagnation.

The U.S. GDP in 2024 was $ 29.18 trillion, estimated to grow by 1.8% in 2025, Eisman said. That 1.8% growth is worth about $530 billion. But if you were to add the AI infrastructure spending by Magnificent Seven companies like Google, Amazon, and Microsoft, it would total about $400 billion, by Eisman’s calculations, meaning if you were to subtract that sum from the projected growth of the U.S. GDP, it would amount to very little.

“The US economy is not even growing, really 50 basis points outside of AI,” Eisman said. “So clearly there have to be pockets of weakness.”

A wealth of economists and tech giants have warned of an expanding AI bubble as investments in the technology mount with little robust evidence so far of the technology’s transformative ability. As concerns over little job growth and creeping inflation grow, so, too, does worry about the health of the U.S. economy.

Signs of a limping consumer piles onto these fears. According to a New York Federal Reserve Bank report released in August, household debt increased by $185 billion to reach $18.39 trillion in 2025’s second quarter, while auto loan balances increased by $13 billion, hitting $1.66 trillion. Student loan balances also inched up $7 billion to total $1.64 trillion.

“The pain is going to happen across the board,” Lakshmi Ganapathi, founder of investment research firm Unicus Research, told Eisman in the podcast. “It’s in the retail. It’s in the buy-now-pay-later. It’s definitely in the auto.”

Warning signs in the auto sector

Ganapathi points to the auto sector as a case study for a hidden way consumers are struggling. During the pandemic, the stimulus checks many Americans received—totalling 476 million payments worth $814 billion—made consumers appear wealthier than they really were to banks, she said. This allowed them to qualify for prime loans, despite not truly having that wealth.

“The credit score prime was an illusion,” Ganapathi said. “Whatever the prime credit scores that are sitting on the [asset-backed security] are technically subprime.”

The pandemic also marked a period of booming car sales, many above sticker price, as original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) hiked prices as a result of supply chain issues and increased consumer demand.

“A lot of OEMs got a little greedy—a lot greedy,” Ganapathi said. “So they manufactured a lot of cars, increased the price of the cars because there was money everywhere—too much liquidity—and people are buying Maserati when they can’t even in real life afford Honda.”

But dealers started to take on more inventory they could sell, compressing prices of new cars and pushing up prices of used cars as demand increased, Ganapathi noted. Last month, CarMax reported a surge in loan loss provisions, with CarMax Auto Finance (CAF) income decreasing 11.2% to $102.6 million for the quarter, and the company noting stronger sales in older, higher mileage vehicles. 

These older used cars may be cheaper for consumers, but maintenance costs more, Ganapathi said. While these cars may be all consumers can afford, banks aren’t interested in repossessing them because the vehicle’s value is less than its repossession and sale. Car repossessions are not only soaring, but a smaller percentage of cars are even able to be repossessed.

“People are getting killed when they go to repossess the car, literally getting killed,” Ganapathi said. “Consumers are collapsing.”

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AI 经济增长 经济泡沫 消费者债务 汽车行业 Steve Eisman AI investment economic stagnation consumer debt auto industry
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