An AI productivity boom, if it materialises, could give major economies more time to repair strained public finances. However, economists caution that it will not resolve deep fiscal pressures on its own.
Debt already exceeds 100 percent of output across most advanced economies. Moreover, projections show it rising further as ageing populations increase costs. At the same time, governments face mounting interest bills and pressure to spend more on defence and climate measures.
AI Productivity Boom And Public Finances
Policymakers in the United States have expressed optimism about AI driven growth. Economists argue that the technology could lift the world out of a post 2008 productivity slump. By boosting worker efficiency, AI may allow employees to focus on higher value tasks.
Stronger economic growth would make government spending and debt burdens more manageable. In addition, it could reduce the risk of scrutiny from bond investors.
To assess the fiscal impact if AI raises labour productivity over the long term, the OECD and three economists shared early estimates with Reuters. Filiz Unsal, the OECD deputy director of economic policy and research, said an AI productivity surge that increases employment could reduce debt across OECD countries by 10 percentage points from the roughly 150 percent of output projected in 2036.
Even so, that would still mark a steep rise from about 110 percent today.
Much depends on whether job creation outweighs losses from automation. Furthermore, outcomes will hinge on whether firms raise wages alongside profits and how governments manage spending.
AI Productivity Boom And Public Finances In The United States
In the United States, two economists projected debt rising more slowly to roughly 120 percent of output over the next decade, compared with around 100 percent now, in their best case scenarios. However, one economist anticipated little change.
Idanna Appio, formerly at the New York Federal Reserve and now a fund manager at First Eagle Investment Management, described productivity as transformative for fiscal dynamics. Nevertheless, she stressed that fiscal problems extend beyond what productivity gains alone can fix.
For now, ratings agency S and P assumes no major improvement in public finances by the end of the decade. Mark Patrick, head of macro and country risk at Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association of America, said policymakers hope for a favourable growth surprise. However, he warned that such an outcome cannot be assumed.
OECD research suggests AI could lift productivity in Britain similarly to the United States. By contrast, gains in Italy and Japan may prove smaller due to lower adoption rates and more limited exposure to AI ready sectors.
Demographics And Fiscal Limits
Ultimately, fiscal dynamics will determine how far an AI productivity boom can offset rising debt. Demographics present the most persistent challenge.
Kevin Khang, head of global economic research at Vanguard, said ageing populations and entitlement commitments lie at the root of debt pressures. Therefore, governments must restore fiscal discipline while AI merely buys time.
Khang sees US growth averaging 3 percent through 2040 in a likely AI scenario, compared with Federal Reserve estimates of around 2 percent potential growth. As a result, he expects debt to reach about 120 percent of output by the late 2030s. Without AI driven growth, he projects debt could climb to 180 percent if borrowing costs rise and markets react negatively.
Bond investors have already penalised governments for excessive spending since yields rose sharply after the pandemic. In addition, declining US immigration has compounded demographic strains, according to Appio. She noted that labour supply shocks could offset productivity gains, although AI still offers reassurance.
Economy wide productivity gains should increase tax revenues. However, if AI reduces employment or concentrates profits in capital that faces lighter taxation, revenue growth may disappoint. On the spending side, public sector efficiency could lower costs, yet higher wages may lift government expenditure.
Kent Smetters of the University of Pennsylvania’s Penn Wharton Budget Model expects only a modest debt impact within a decade. He argued that faster growth would do little to curb social security costs because benefits link to average wages.
Economists also highlight uncertainty around interest rates. If productivity lifts real rates, debt servicing costs could rise. Moreover, a recession could arrive before any AI boom fully materialises. Christian Keller of Barclays warned that markets may grow nervous about fiscal trajectories if growth disappoints.

