The outside view, insofar is that is a well-defined thing...
It’s not really a well-defined thing, which is why the standard on this site is to taboo those words and just explain what your lines of evidence are, or the motivation for any special priors if you have them.
If AGI were arriving in 2030, the outside view says interest rates would be very high (I’m not particularly knowledgeable about this and might have the details wrong but see the analysis here, I believe the situation is still similar), and less confidently I think the S&P’s value would probably be measured in lightcone percentage points (?).
So, your claim is that interest rates would be very high if AGI were imminent, and they’re not so it’s not. The last time someone said this, if the people arguing in the comment section had simply made a bet on interest rates changing, they would have made a lot of money! Ditto for buying up AI-related stocks or call options on those stocks.
I think you’re just overestimating the ability of the market to generalize to out of distribution events. Prices are set by a market’s participants, and the institutions with the ability to move prices are mostly not thinking about AGI timelines at present. It wouldn’t matter if AGI was arriving in five or ten or twenty years, Bridgewater would be basically doing the same things, and so their inaction doesn’t provide much evidence. Inherent in these forecasts there are also naturally going to be a lot of assumptions about the value of money (or titles to partial ownership of companies controlled by Sam Altmans) in a post-AGI scenario. These are pretty well-disputed premises, to say the least, which makes interpreting current market prices hard.
As far as I am concerned, AGI should be able to do any intellectual task that a human can do. I think that inventing important new ideas tends to take at least a month, but possibly the length of a PhD thesis. So it seems to be a reasonable interpretation that we might see human level AI around mid-2030 to 2040, which happens to be about my personal median.
The issue is, ML research itself is composed of many tasks that do take less than a month for humans to execute. For example, on this model, sometime before “idea generation”, you’re going to have a model that can do most high-context software engineering tasks. The research department at any of the big AI labs would be able to do more stuff if it had such a model. So while current AI is not accelerating machine learning research that much, as it gets better, the trend line from the METR paper is going to curl upward.
You could say that the “inventing important new ideas” part is going to be such a heavy bottleneck, that this speedup won’t amount to much. But I think that’s mostly wrong, and that if you asked ML researchers at OpenAI, a drop in remote worker that could “only” be directed to do things that otherwise took 12 hours would speed up their work by a lot.
But the deeper problem is that the argument is ultimately, subtly circular. Current AI research does look a lot like rapidly iterating and trying random engineering improvements. If you already believe this will lead to AGI, then certainly AI coding assistants which can rapidly iterate would expedite the process. However, I do not believe that blind iteration on the current paradigm leads to AGI (at least not anytime soon), so I see no reason to accept this argument.
It’s actually not circular at all. “Current AI research” has taken us from machines that can’t talk to machines that can talk, write computer programs, give advice, etc. in about five years. That’s the empirical evidence that you can make research progress doing “random” stuff. In the absence of further evidence, people are just expecting the thing that has happened over the last five years to continue. You can reject that claim, but at this point I think the burden of proof is on the people that do.
I am saying so! The market is definitely not pricing in AGI; doesn’t matter if it comes in 2028, or 2035, or 2040. Though interest rates are a pretty bad way to arb this; I would just buy call options on the Nasdaq.
They’re not that useful yet.