Probably eventually, but integration of AI in consumer products doesn't necessarily sell new units, it's just a new and eventually expected feature that keeps you competitive. So short of extensive robotic usage or getting to the point of AI being able to make new discoveries (which I'm skeptical of), you mainly have the big owners of the tech making money selling it to everyone and then cost cutting everywhere else.
Then cost cutting leads to job losses and less money flowing through the economy and a collapse unless business find new ways to generate jobs or they increase wages for existing workers and half the work force (ahem) drops out.
Probably eventually, but integration of consumer products doesn't necessarily sell new units, it's just a new and eventually expected feature that keeps you competitive. So short of extensive robotic usage or getting to the point of AI being able to make new discoveries (which I'm skeptical of), you mainly have the big owners of the tech making money selling it to everyone and then cost cutting everywhere else.
Then cost cutting leads to job losses and less money flowing through the economy and a collapse unless business find new ways to generate jobs or they increase wages for existing workers and half the work force (ahem) drops out.
Probably eventually, but integration of consumer products doesn't necessarily sell new units, it's just a new and eventually expected feature. So short of extensive robotic usage or getting to the point of AI being able to make new discoveries (which I'm skeptical of), you mainly have the big owners of the tech making money selling it to everyone and then cost cutting everywhere else.
Then cost cutting leads to job losses and less money flowing through the economy and a collapse unless business find new ways to generate jobs or they increase wages for existing workers and half the work force (ahem) drops out.