Yeah that seems like a reasonable example of a good that can’t be automated.
I think I’m mostly interested in whether these sorts of goods that seem difficult to automate will be a pragmatic constraint on economic growth. It seems clear that they’ll eventually be ultimate binding constraints as long as we don’t get massive population growth, but it’s a separate question about whether or not they’ll start being constraints early enough to prevent rapid AI-driven economic growth.
Yeah that seems like a reasonable example of a good that can’t be automated.
I think I’m mostly interested in whether these sorts of goods that seem difficult to automate will be a pragmatic constraint on economic growth. It seems clear that they’ll eventually be ultimate binding constraints as long as we don’t get massive population growth, but it’s a separate question about whether or not they’ll start being constraints early enough to prevent rapid AI-driven economic growth.