The Automation Paradox: Why Replacing Humans With AI Is An Economic Suicide Pact

The Automation Paradox: Why Replacing Humans With AI Is An Economic Suicide Pact

The recent announcement from Meta regarding the layoff of 8,000 employees is more than just another headline in the tech sector’s ongoing volatility; it is a signal of a structural shift that should alarm anyone who understands the foundational mechanics of a consumer economy. When Mark Zuckerberg admitted that the massive capital expenditures on artificial intelligence have directly contributed to the need to scale back the company, he laid bare a cold, mathematical reality that is beginning to play out across the globe.

Automator’s Paradox

We are witnessing the first major tremors of what economists are now calling the Automator’s Paradox. While it is entirely rational for an individual firm to replace a hundred-person team with ten people aided by advanced AI, the collective result of this behavior across the entire market is nothing short of economic cannibalism. If we continue on this path of wholesale human replacement, we are not building a more efficient future. Instead, we are dismantling the very engine of consumption that keeps the global economy alive.

The logic presented by Big Tech leadership is deceptively simple. Meta, Amazon, and Google are on track to spend a staggering $750 billion on AI this year alone. To justify these astronomical investments to shareholders, these companies must find efficiencies. In the corporate lexicon, efficiency is almost always a euphemism for reducing headcount. Zuckerberg’s observation that a team once requiring a hundred people might now only need ten is a testament to the sheer power of modern generative AI. This microeconomic victory masks a macroeconomic catastrophe. A company that automates its workforce saves on wages, but it also removes those wages from the pool of disposable income that fuels the rest of the economy. When this happens in isolation, the impact is negligible. When it happens simultaneously across the Fortune 500, we face a systemic collapse of demand.

The AI Layoff Trap

This brings us to the most chilling realization of our current era, which was highlighted in a landmark economic research paper titled “The AI Layoff Trap” released in March 2026. The study models a scenario in which companies automate faster than the broader economy can absorb displaced labor. It identifies a Prisoner’s Dilemma at the scale of the entire global economy. Each individual CEO is incentivized to automate to stay competitive and protect margins. As every company follows this rational path, they collectively destroy the consumer base that buys its products. We are approaching a tipping point where the supply side of the economy, powered by tireless AI, becomes hyper-productive, while the demand side, comprised of unemployed humans, withers away. Zuckerberg himself noted that Meta’s ad revenue fluctuated based on consumer discretionary spending linked to oil prices. He should perhaps be more concerned that his own internal efficiencies are removing the very consumers who would click on those ads in the first place.

This is particularly haunting because it tested every conventional safety net we have spent the last decade debating. We have long been told that universal basic income, worker equity participation, or massive upskilling programs would bridge the gap. They do not. Upskilling fails when the AI evolves faster than a human can be retrained. Universal basic income, while helpful for subsistence, does not replace the robust discretionary spending required to sustain a growth-oriented economy. Even capital income taxes and Coasian bargaining were found to be insufficient to stop the downward spiral. The more capable the AI becomes and the more competitive the market remains, the worse the economic outcome for society. It is a terrifying irony that the more we improve our technology, the more we accelerate our own economic obsolescence.

The only intervention that the study found to be effective is a Pigouvian automation tax. This is a direct tax on the act of replacing a human role with a machine. In economic terms, a Pigouvian tax is intended to discourage an activity that creates a negative cost for others, much like a carbon tax. By taxing the replacement of humans, we force companies to internalize the social cost of unemployment and lost consumption. This is not about being Luddites or fearing progress. It is about acknowledging that the market, left to its own devices, will not self-correct. The market is currently rewarding companies for cutting their own throats by firing their future customers. Only a rigorous policy intervention can break the cycle and ensure that AI serves as a tool for human prosperity rather than a replacement for human existence.

Recirculation, Not Replacement

The vision we must advocate for is one of recirculation rather than replacement. The goal of an AI-driven economy should not be a world where humans are discarded, but one where AI works to generate wealth that is then paid out to humans, who in turn spend it to keep the ecosystem circulating. We need a system where AI passes the money to the human. This is not just about charity; it is about systemic survival. If AI can do the work of 90 people, the value generated by that AI must still find its way into the pockets of those 90 people so they can remain active participants in the economy. If the wealth generated by AI is merely hoarded in the capital expenditures of a few tech giants or returned to a shrinking pool of investors, the circulation stops, and the economy dies.

The current trajectory at Meta is a warning of what happens when we prioritize infrastructure over people. The company’s capital expenditure guidance has climbed as high as $145 billion, which marks a significant increase from previous years. This is a massive bet on compute at the expense of community. When Meta’s chief people officer, Janelle Gale, speaks of offsetting investments by laying off staff, she is describing a transfer of wealth from human labor to silicon hardware. This might look good on a quarterly earnings report, but it is unsustainable in the long term. A world of perfect AI and zero workers is a world with no customers. The tech giants are currently building the most sophisticated stores in history, but they are inadvertently firing everyone who has the money to walk through the doors.

We must shift the narrative from asking how we use AI to cut costs to asking how we use AI to expand human capacity. Zuckerberg’s point that AI can help employees spin up more new projects is the right sentiment, but it is currently being used as a justification for downsizing rather than expansion. If AI makes a team ten times more efficient, the answer should be to do ten times more things with those 100 people, not to keep the output the same and fire 90% of the staff. We are currently stuck in a scarcity mindset regarding human labor, viewing it only as a liability to be minimized. We need to view it as the ultimate engine of demand.

The Choice

Ultimately, the choice before us is a political one, not a technological one. The automation wave is already running, and as the data shows, it is picking up speed. We cannot wait for the invisible hand to fix this, because the invisible hand is currently busy coding its own replacement. We need a global consensus on an automation tax and a fundamental redesign of how wealth is distributed in an era of post-labor productivity. The ecosystem must remain circular. Humans must be paid, and humans must spend. If we allow AI to break that circle, we are not just losing jobs; we are losing the very foundation of our modern civilization. The 8,000 people leaving Meta this month are not just a statistic. They are a symptom of a systemic fever that, if left untreated, will break the global economy.

The scale of this challenge is unprecedented because the rate of change is exponential. In previous industrial revolutions, the economy had decades to adjust, and new sectors emerged to absorb displaced workers. In 2026, the speed of AI deployment is measured in months. This leaves no room for natural market corrections. If every major corporation decides to automate 10% of its workforce this year to fund AI development, the resulting drop in consumer confidence and spending will trigger a recession that no amount of algorithmic trading can stop. We are effectively watching a high-speed chase where the destination is a brick wall. The only way to avoid the crash is to put a price on the displacement itself, ensuring that the transition to an automated world is slow enough for the social fabric to remain intact.

Policy makers must realize that the current corporate strategy of high capex and low headcount is a race to the bottom. While companies like Meta, Nvidia, and Amazon might see their stock prices soar in the short term due to AI hype, those valuations are built on the assumption of future growth. That growth requires consumers with disposable income. If the middle class is hollowed out by automation, the very products these AI models are designed to sell will have no market. We must champion a future where AI works for us, not instead of us. This requires a radical rethinking of the relationship between capital and labor. The idea that humans should be paid because AI works is not radical; it is the only logical conclusion for a society that wishes to remain a society. We must demand that the gains from automation are used to fund human life, ensuring that the economy remains a tool for human flourishing rather than a playground for autonomous machines.

 

Source: https://www.benzinga.com/Opinion/26/05/52664041/the-automation-paradox-why-replacing-humans-with-ai-is-an-economic-suicide-pact

 

Anndy Lian is an early blockchain adopter and experienced serial entrepreneur who is known for his work in the government sector. He is a best selling book author- “NFT: From Zero to Hero” and “Blockchain Revolution 2030”.

Currently, he is appointed as the Chief Digital Advisor at Mongolia Productivity Organization, championing national digitization. Prior to his current appointments, he was the Chairman of BigONE Exchange, a global top 30 ranked crypto spot exchange and was also the Advisory Board Member for Hyundai DAC, the blockchain arm of South Korea’s largest car manufacturer Hyundai Motor Group. Lian played a pivotal role as the Blockchain Advisor for Asian Productivity Organisation (APO), an intergovernmental organization committed to improving productivity in the Asia-Pacific region.

An avid supporter of incubating start-ups, Anndy has also been a private investor for the past eight years. With a growth investment mindset, Anndy strategically demonstrates this in the companies he chooses to be involved with. He believes that what he is doing through blockchain technology currently will revolutionise and redefine traditional businesses. He also believes that the blockchain industry has to be “redecentralised”.

j j j

Navigating the privacy paradox in Web3: Insights from DeCC Day at Consensus 2024

Navigating the privacy paradox in Web3: Insights from DeCC Day at Consensus 2024

Web3 privacy emerges as a central theme, often heralded as a fundamental human right yet paradoxically elusive in the digital realm. The DeCC Day panel at Consensus 2024, titled “The Importance of Privacy in Web3,” brought together a diverse group of experts to unravel this complex issue.

Adryenn Ashley, a venture capitalist and founder of Slay Ventures, opened the discussion with a provocative introduction. She highlighted her background in creating a dating app that prioritised privacy and consent, leveraging blockchain technology. Her energetic tone set the stage for a dynamic exchange of ideas.

Seth, known in the crypto community as ‘MineyourBiz,’ identified himself as a privacy advocate to the point of affliction. His commitment to evaluating technologies for market viability and technological soundness has led him to monitor major waves in privacy tech and interview many privacy-oriented founders.

Sandy Carter, COO of Unstoppable Domains and founder of Unstoppable Women of Web3 in AI shared her company’s efforts in creating a digital identity platform that empowers users to control their personal information. She underscored the importance of allowing individuals to decide what they disclose, framing privacy as a choice rather than a given.

As a book author and fund manager from Singapore, I was also a part of this panel and naturally emphasised the significance of privacy, offering a unique perspective as both an author and investor.

Debating privacy: Universal desire vs curiosity and government oversight

The panellists engaged in a spirited debate over the nature of privacy and its perception among individuals and governments. Seth argued that privacy is a universal human desire, transcending cultural and political boundaries. However, Ashley countered that while individuals crave privacy, they are equally curious about others’ lives, driven by a systematic craving for information.

The conversation turned when I discussed the consumer’s role in the privacy equation. I posited that consumers must care about their privacy to be effectively protected, citing the use of Zero-Knowledge Proofs (ZKPs) in blockchain applications to preserve user anonymity while enhancing user experience.

Carter expanded on this by discussing the role of digital identities in managing privacy settings, allowing users to share information with applications selectively. This approach, she argued, respects the individual’s right to privacy while acknowledging the varying degrees of openness each person is comfortable with.

Also Read: Embracing the NFT revolution: Insights from Anndy Lian’s NFT.NYC speech

The panellists also tackled the thorny issue of government surveillance and regulation. Seth highlighted the lack of consideration for privacy in government discussions, often viewed as an inconvenience rather than a necessity. I shared insights from his direct advisory role with governments, revealing that while on-chain activities might be challenging to trace, off-chain actions, particularly cashing out to fiat, are transparent and traceable.

As the discussion drew close, the panellists agreed on the importance of trust in the relationship between privacy, governments, and the public. Austin Arnold, Co-Founder of Altcoin Daily, closed the panel by emphasising that privacy builds confidence and trust, which are crucial for market movement and engagement.

Privacy in Web3: A cornerstone for the future

In the digital tapestry of Web3, privacy is a beacon of individual autonomy, a principle ardently debated and fiercely defended. The DeCC Day panel at Consensus 2024 illuminated the intricate dance between personal discretion and societal transparency. The discourse traversed the spectrum of privacy—from a fundamental human yearning to a nuanced societal construct, challenging the audience to reconsider their own stances on the matter.

The panellists, each a vanguard in their respective fields, unravelled the privacy paradox with eloquence and insight. They painted a world where privacy is not a relic of the past but a cornerstone of the future—a future where trust is the currency and privacy is its mint. The dialogue underscored the imperative for privacy to be more than an afterthought in the Web3 narrative; it must be the plot itself.

As the conversation drew to a close, the consensus was clear: privacy in Web3 is not just about the right to secrecy but the right to agency. It is about crafting a digital realm where individuals navigate with confidence, empowered by the sovereignty over their data. The panel at DeCC Day did not just discuss privacy; they championed it, urging us to envision a Web3 ecosystem that is as secure as it is open, as private as it is communal.

In this era of technological renaissance, the panel’s insights serve as a compass, guiding us toward a more equitable and private digital future. The importance of privacy in Web3, as articulated by these thought leaders, is a clarion call to action—a call to protect what makes us human in a world that is increasingly digital.

The full video can be found here.

 

 

Source: https://e27.co/navigating-the-privacy-paradox-in-web3-insights-from-decc-day-at-consensus-2024-20240622/

Anndy Lian is an early blockchain adopter and experienced serial entrepreneur who is known for his work in the government sector. He is a best selling book author- “NFT: From Zero to Hero” and “Blockchain Revolution 2030”.

Currently, he is appointed as the Chief Digital Advisor at Mongolia Productivity Organization, championing national digitization. Prior to his current appointments, he was the Chairman of BigONE Exchange, a global top 30 ranked crypto spot exchange and was also the Advisory Board Member for Hyundai DAC, the blockchain arm of South Korea’s largest car manufacturer Hyundai Motor Group. Lian played a pivotal role as the Blockchain Advisor for Asian Productivity Organisation (APO), an intergovernmental organization committed to improving productivity in the Asia-Pacific region.

An avid supporter of incubating start-ups, Anndy has also been a private investor for the past eight years. With a growth investment mindset, Anndy strategically demonstrates this in the companies he chooses to be involved with. He believes that what he is doing through blockchain technology currently will revolutionise and redefine traditional businesses. He also believes that the blockchain industry has to be “redecentralised”.

j j j

Navigating the Privacy Paradox in Web3: Insights from DeCC Day at Consensus 2024

Navigating the Privacy Paradox in Web3: Insights from DeCC Day at Consensus 2024

Web3 privacy emerges as a central theme, often heralded as a fundamental human right yet paradoxically elusive in the digital realm. The DeCC Day panel at Consensus 2024, titled “The Importance of Privacy in Web3,” brought together a diverse group of experts to unravel this complex issue.

Adryenn Ashley, a venture capitalist and founder of Slay Ventures, opened the discussion with a provocative introduction, highlighting her background in creating a dating app that prioritized privacy and consent, leveraging blockchain technology. Her energetic tone set the stage for a dynamic exchange of ideas.

Anndy Lian, a book author and fund manager from Singapore, expressed his passion for privacy, emphasizing its significance in various conferences he attends. His perspective as an author and investor provided a unique lens through which to view the privacy debate.

Seth, known in the crypto community as ‘MineyourBiz,’ identified himself as a privacy advocate to the point of affliction. His commitment to evaluating technologies for market viability and technological soundness has led him to monitor major waves in privacy tech, interviewing many privacy-oriented founders.

Sandy Carter, COO of Unstoppable Domains and founder of Unstoppable Women of Web3 in AI, shared her company’s efforts in creating a digital identity platform that empowers users to control their personal information. She underscored the importance of allowing individuals to decide what they disclose, framing privacy as a choice rather than a given.

The panellists engaged in a spirited debate over the nature of privacy and its perception among individuals and governments. Seth argued that privacy is a universal human desire, transcending cultural and political boundaries. However, Adryenn countered that while individuals crave privacy for themselves, they are equally curious about others’ lives, driven by a systematic craving for information.

The conversation took a turn when Anndy brought up the consumer’s role in the privacy equation. He posited that consumers must care about their privacy for it to be effectively protected, citing the use of Zero-Knowledge Proofs (ZKPs) in blockchain applications as a means to preserve user anonymity while enhancing user experience.

Sandy expanded on this by discussing the role of digital identities in managing privacy settings, allowing users to selectively share information with applications. This approach, she argued, respects the individual’s right to privacy while acknowledging the varying degrees of openness each person is comfortable with.

The panelists also tackled the thorny issue of government surveillance and regulation. Seth highlighted the lack of consideration for privacy in government discussions, often viewed as an inconvenience rather than a necessity. Andy shared insights from his direct advisory role with governments, revealing that while on-chain activities might be challenging to trace, off-chain actions, particularly cashing out to fiat, are transparent and traceable.

As the discussion drew to a close, the panellists agreed on the paramount importance of trust in the relationship between privacy, governments, and the public. Austin Arnold, Co-founder of Altcoin Daily closed the panel by emphasizing that privacy builds confidence and trust, which are crucial for market movement and engagement.

In the digital tapestry of Web3, privacy stands as a beacon of individual autonomy, a principle ardently debated and fiercely defended. The DeCC Day panel at Consensus 2024 illuminated the intricate dance between personal discretion and societal transparency. The discourse traversed the spectrum of privacy—from a fundamental human yearning to a nuanced societal construct, challenging the audience to reconsider their own stances on the matter.

The panellists, each a vanguard in their respective fields, unravelled the privacy paradox with eloquence and insight. They painted a world where privacy is not a relic of the past but a cornerstone of the future—a future where trust is the currency and privacy its mint. The dialogue underscored the imperative for privacy to be more than an afterthought in the Web3 narrative; it must be the plot itself.

As the conversation drew to a close, the consensus was clear: privacy in Web3 is not just about the right to secrecy but the right to agency. It is about crafting a digital realm where individuals navigate with confidence, empowered by the sovereignty over their data. The panel at DeCC Day did not just discuss privacy; they championed it, urging us to envision a Web3 ecosystem that is as secure as it is open, as private as it is communal.

In this era of technological renaissance, the panel’s insights serve as a compass, guiding us toward a more equitable and private digital future. The importance of privacy in Web3, as articulated by these thought leaders, is a clarion call to action—a call to protect what makes us human in a world that is increasingly digital.

Anndy Lian is an early blockchain adopter and experienced serial entrepreneur who is known for his work in the government sector. He is a best selling book author- “NFT: From Zero to Hero” and “Blockchain Revolution 2030”.

Currently, he is appointed as the Chief Digital Advisor at Mongolia Productivity Organization, championing national digitization. Prior to his current appointments, he was the Chairman of BigONE Exchange, a global top 30 ranked crypto spot exchange and was also the Advisory Board Member for Hyundai DAC, the blockchain arm of South Korea’s largest car manufacturer Hyundai Motor Group. Lian played a pivotal role as the Blockchain Advisor for Asian Productivity Organisation (APO), an intergovernmental organization committed to improving productivity in the Asia-Pacific region.

An avid supporter of incubating start-ups, Anndy has also been a private investor for the past eight years. With a growth investment mindset, Anndy strategically demonstrates this in the companies he chooses to be involved with. He believes that what he is doing through blockchain technology currently will revolutionise and redefine traditional businesses. He also believes that the blockchain industry has to be “redecentralised”.

j j j