It seems to me that governments now believe that AI will be significant, but not extremely advantageous.
I don’t think that many policy makers believe that AI could cause GDP growth of 20+% within 10 years. Maybe they think that powerful AI would add 1% to GDP growth rates, which is definitely worth caring about. It wouldn’t be enough for any country which developed it to become the most powerful country in the world within a few decades, and would be an incentive in line with some other technologies that have been rejected.
The UK has AI as one of their “priority areas of focus”, along with quantum technologies, engineering biology, semiconductors and future telecoms in their International Technology Strategy. In the UK’s overall strategy document, ‘AI’ is mentioned 15 times, compared to ‘cyber’ (45 times), ‘nuclear’ (43), ‘energy’ (37), ‘climate’ (30), ‘space’ (17), ‘health’ (15), ‘food’ (8), ‘quantum’ (7), ‘green’ (6), and ‘biology’ (5). AI is becoming part of countries’ strategies, but I don’t think it’s at the forefront. The UK government is more involved in AI policy than most governments.
It seems to me that governments now believe that AI will be significant, but not extremely advantageous.
I don’t think that many policy makers believe that AI could cause GDP growth of 20+% within 10 years. Maybe they think that powerful AI would add 1% to GDP growth rates, which is definitely worth caring about. It wouldn’t be enough for any country which developed it to become the most powerful country in the world within a few decades, and would be an incentive in line with some other technologies that have been rejected.
The UK has AI as one of their “priority areas of focus”, along with quantum technologies, engineering biology, semiconductors and future telecoms in their International Technology Strategy. In the UK’s overall strategy document, ‘AI’ is mentioned 15 times, compared to ‘cyber’ (45 times), ‘nuclear’ (43), ‘energy’ (37), ‘climate’ (30), ‘space’ (17), ‘health’ (15), ‘food’ (8), ‘quantum’ (7), ‘green’ (6), and ‘biology’ (5). AI is becoming part of countries’ strategies, but I don’t think it’s at the forefront. The UK government is more involved in AI policy than most governments.