AI economic plan needed before crisis, single-source report warns

AI economic plan needed before crisis, single-source report warns

7 reported

A single-source report from Vox warns that the United States is not prepared for an economic emergency driven by rapid AI scaling, and argues that policymakers should develop detailed, ready-to-pass plans before a crisis window opens. The article, written by a journalist who previously worked at Vox, draws parallels to the 2008 financial crisis and the Covid-19 pandemic, when bipartisan support for large-scale cash payments and bailouts emerged briefly then vanished. The author notes that AI company Anthropic reported an annualized revenue rate of $47 billion as of May 2026, up from $30 billion a month earlier, and that the AI boom is unfolding faster than the internet or mobile booms. The article states that the Center for Shared AI Prosperity, a new DC-based research group, is collecting policy ideas for tax codes and safety nets suited to the AI era, with an open Request for Ideas that includes funding for the best proposals. The author cautions that assuming AI will permanently shift politics toward generous policy is wishful thinking, citing how Covid-era consensus evaporated within months.

What’s reported

The article states that AI is scaling faster than any past tech boom and is likely to produce an economic emergency.
Anthropic reported an annualized revenue rate of $47 billion as of May 2026, up from $30 billion a month earlier.
The article says the US is not ready for a crisis moment when policymakers might accept big risks and changes.
The Center for Shared AI Prosperity is a new DC-based research group collecting policy ideas for the AI era.
The article cites the 2008 financial crisis and Covid-19 pandemic as examples of brief windows for large-scale policy action.
During Covid, the CARES Act included payments of up to $1,200 per eligible adult, $2,400 for married couples, and $500 per child, plus $600 per week unemployment insurance.
The article notes that the TARP program came from a "Break the Glass Plan" drafted by Bush Treasury officials in April 2008.

Key figures

Tom Cotton, Republican Senator
Gina Raimondo, DC figure mentioned as pushing undersized fixes
Neel Kashkari, Bush Treasury official
Philip Swagel, Bush Treasury official
Hank Paulson, Bush Treasury Secretary
Nancy Pelosi, then-Speaker of the House
George W. Bush, President

Sources: vox.com

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