Fortune | FORTUNE 10月31日 00:45
美联储主席:AI或致就业增长停滞,经济呈现“K型”分化
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美联储主席鲍威尔指出,尽管表面上劳动力市场强劲,但其增长势头正在减弱,部分原因是人工智能(AI)的应用。多家企业已明确表示因AI而裁员或暂停招聘,预计未来多年内无需增加人手。AI和自动化提高了产出,但也使得企业能用更少的人做更多的事,导致就业市场疲软,尽管GDP仍保持增长。这种现象使得美联储面临政策两难:一方面,AI投资推动经济增长,另一方面,它又抑制了就业增长,这与通胀风险并存。经济呈现“K型”分化,高收入群体和大型企业受益于AI,而低收入消费者则因成本上升而减少支出,这增加了美联储政策制定的复杂性。

💡 AI对就业市场的影响日益显现:美联储主席鲍威尔指出,虽然整体失业率较低,但实际就业增长已接近零,企业因AI而裁员或暂停招聘的现象增多,预示着长期内可能不再需要增加人力。这表明AI正在重塑劳动力需求,可能导致结构性失业。

📈 AI驱动经济增长与就业放缓并存的政策困境:AI和自动化技术正在推动经济扩张和生产率提升,尤其体现在数据中心等相关领域的投资增加。然而,这些技术也使得企业能够以更少的人力实现更高的产出,从而抑制了就业增长,给美联储带来了“既要控制通胀又要稳定就业”的两难局面。

📊 经济“K型”分化加剧,消费结构出现差异:经济增长呈现明显的“K型”特征,高收入群体和大型企业受益于AI带来的生产率提升和股市上涨,而低收入消费者则面临生活成本压力,被迫转向更便宜的商品。这种消费行为的分化反映了经济复苏的不均衡性,增加了政策制定的复杂性。

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell drew a stark picture of a labor market that looks fine on the surface—4.3% unemployment, solid consumer spending—but is quietly losing momentum underneath. Once you adjust for statistical overcounting in the payroll data, he said during a press conference Wednesday following the FOMC meeting, “job creation is pretty close to zero.”

He connected that slowdown, at least in part, to what CEOs are now openly telling investors: AI allows them to do more with fewer people.

He noted “a significant number of companies” have recently announced layoffs or hiring pauses, with many of them explicitly citing AI as the reason.

“Much of the time they’re talking about AI and what it can do,” Powell told reporters after the Fed’s rate-cut decision, warning large employers are signaling they won’t need to add headcount for years. “We’re watching that very carefully,” he added.

The comments come as the Fed cut interest rates by a quarter point to a range of 3.75%–4%, citing “downside risks to employment” even as inflation remains elevated. Powell said the U.S. economy is still expanding at a “moderate pace,” even as hiring slows. He described that spending as one of the “big sources of growth in the economy,” driven by companies building data centers and other equipment tied to artificial intelligence.

Powell also pushed back on the idea that all that spending is amounting to another speculative bubble. He drew a clear line between today’s surge in capital expenditure and the dot-com era, noting “these companies actually have earnings.”  Those projects, he said, aren’t especially sensitive to interest rates, though, since they reflect long-term bets on higher productivity.

At the same time, Powell emphasized the boom creates a policy dilemma for the Fed. AI and automation are boosting output, but they’re also allowing companies to do more with fewer workers, leaving the labor market softer, even while GDP stays positive.

“We have upside risks to inflation, downside risks to employment,” he said. “This is a very difficult thing for a central bank, because one of those calls for rates to be lower, one calls for rates to be higher.”

A bifurcated market

Recent corporate announcements illustrate Powell’s warning. Amazon announced this week it laid off 14,000 middle managers—about 4% of its white-collar workforcein an effort to “remove organizational layers.” The layoffs come amid their rampant investments into AI.  Target, Paramount, and other large firms followed with their own cuts.

According to a Challenger, Gray & Christmas report, U.S. employers have announced nearly 946,000 layoffs so far this year—the highest total since 2020—with more than 17,000 explicitly tied to AI and another 20,000 to automation.

“Job creation is very low, and the job-finding rate for people who are unemployed is very low,” Powell said.

The phenomenon is so widespread some economists have coined a new term—the “Great Freeze”—to describe the dismal labor market conditions. With unemployment among recent college grads topping 5%—and AI threatening to automate entry-level office jobs—many Gen Z workers are turning to graduate school as a strategic timeout. 

That awkward balance—strong investment but weak hiring— is now at the center of the Fed’s decision-making. Powell said the economy increasingly resembles a K-shape, with higher-income households and large corporations benefiting from strong stock markets and AI-fueled productivity gains, while lower-income consumers pull back under the weight of rising costs. 

He pointed to anecdotal reports from major retailers and consumer companies describing a “bifurcated economy,” in which wealthier Americans continue to spend freely but those at the bottom are trading down to cheaper goods. “

“Consumers at the lower end are struggling and buying less and shifting to lower-cost products,” Powell said, noting the uneven effects of growth make the Fed’s balancing act even more complicated.

“There is no risk-free path for policy,” Powell said. “We’re navigating the tension between our employment and inflation goals as carefully as we can.”

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美联储 人工智能 AI 劳动力市场 经济 就业 通货膨胀 Federal Reserve Artificial Intelligence AI Labor Market Economy Employment Inflation
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