If we invite the bureaucrats in, itâs âgame overâ⦠[RiskHedge Report] [Stephen McBride]
Where will AI fall on the “chart of the century?” By Stephen McBride - RiskHedge This is the greatest threat we face to innovation⦠Itâs a battle between red and blue⦠The âchart of the centuryâ tells it all⦠Itâs âgame overâ if we invite the bureaucrats in⦠Orrin Hatch was baffled. In 2018, Congress grilled Facebook (META) CEO Mark Zuckerberg for 10 hours. Senator Orrin Hatch demanded to know how Facebook pays the bills when itâs free to use. Zuckerberg answered Hatch with a smirk: âSenator, we run ads.â Bureaucrats barely understood how social media companies worked⦠- And now they want to control artificial intelligence (AI). If youâve been following RiskHedge Report, you know all about ChatGPT. [The AI chatbot gained 100 million users in just two months.]( That makes it the fastest-growing app, product, or business in history. Itâs caught Washingtonâs attention, too. Axios recently reported Senator Chuck Schumer is spearheading the US governmentâs effort to regulate AI. Last Friday, [I explained why Elon Muskâs recent call to pause âgiant AI experimentsâ for six months]( would kill innovation. But thatâs not the only reason you should oppose it. A pause would invite the bureaucrats and politicians in. And as Iâll show you, thatâs like committing innovation suicide. - Itâs a battle between red and blue⦠No, not Republicans versus Democrats⦠Iâm talking about âregulatedâ vs. âinnovatedâ industries. Take a look at this graph. I call it the âchart of the century.â It tracks changes in the prices of 14 everyday goods and services (plus wages) going back to 2000. Source: aei.org You can see healthcare, college, and childcare costs (in red) are surging faster than anything else. What do these three industries have in common? Theyâre each heavily regulated, or as I like to call them: âPlaygrounds for bureaucrats and politicians.â Government healthcare spending topped $4 trillion last year. Another couple hundred billion dollars has been plowed into education. And over 90% of the $1.75 trillion in outstanding student debt is funded by Uncle Sam. - Hereâs why âregulatedâ industries go backward. Technology is forbidden. Healthcare and education are two of Americaâs largest industries. Combined, theyâre worth trillions of dollars a year. RiskHedge Publisher: "I used to struggle with investing. Now I make only 2 trades a month, on average, and enjoy returns that beat 98% of investors... including most professional money managers." [Click here to discover more.]( Savvy entrepreneurs have tried to crack these markets before. Problem is, innovation is essentially illegal in these industries. Joe Lonsdale, billionaire co-founder of Palantir, gave a great example of this: âThe American Medical Association will lobby against using AI⦠against any new way of doing things more efficiently. My friend is an allergist. Thereâs a huge shortage of allergists in the Bay Area. He could see 20 times as many patients by building some basic tech. Heâs not allowed to do that. Itâs against the law! Any other industry heâd be 20X more productive, bring the cost down and everyone would get treated.â Compare this to âinnovatedâ industries (in blue) in the above chart. These sectors are mostly free from government interference. Technology is allowed to flourish. The TV you buy today is better and likely cheaper than the one you bought a decade ago. I remember about 20 years ago, my uncle came home with a 32-inch âflat screenâ TV. As a kid who grew up playing video games on clunky box TVs, this was like something from another dimension. Price tag: $1,500. Today, you can pick up a flat-screen TV at Walmart thatâs double the size for less than half the price. At this rate, weâll live in a world where a TV that covers your entire wall costs $100, but a four-year college degree will set you back $1 million. Itâs like living in two separate economies. - Where will AI fall on the âchart of the century?â Elon Muskâs call to pause âgiant AI experimentsâ is one of the worst ideas Iâve ever heard. Itâs like if Jeff Bezos and Googleâs (GOOGL) Larry Page had called for a âceasefireâ on internet progress in the early â90s. The announcement invites bureaucrats and politicians to start concocting new regulations. âThese AI nerds are crying out for rules; letâs give âem what they want.â Itâs blood in the water. Before you know it, government sharks will start circling, trying to bite off their pound of flesh. The open letter Musk and 1,100 others signed says: âIf such a pause cannot be enacted quickly, governments should step in and institute a moratorium.â Do you expect the same bureaucrats who brought you a student loan crisis⦠broke the healthcare system⦠and racked up $30 trillion in federal debt to get AI regulations right? Many of them donât even understand how social media companiesâand internet advertisingâworks! Technology makes things better⦠faster⦠and cheaper. We get more for less. TVs are the perfect example. But every heavily regulated industry is âanti-technology.â We get less for more. - Can AI pull off an internet-like âgreat escape?â The internet has been the greatest moneymaking machine of our lifetimes. Six of the 10 largest companies in the worldâworth a combined $8 trillionâbuilt their fortunes on the back of the web. Most of Americaâs rich elite also made their vast fortunes from the internet. It showered stock market investors with profits, too. The web was a bastion of innovation and wealth because the government largely left it alone and let it flourish. You didnât need permission from the government to use it. There were no permits and licenses required to build on top of it. Even when regulators enacted laws in the mid-â90s, they took a hands-off approach. Now, imagine if politicians had drafted the 500-page âInternet Actâ just as the web was taking off. You couldnât have predicted Google, Facebook, or Uber (UBER) in the early â90s. So how could you pass laws to regulate them? In fact, I bet the âInternet Actâ would have included some silly rules killing these companies before they were even born. AI is one of the most powerful disruptions of our lifetimes. It has the potential to be as big as the internet. But if we pause and invite the bureaucrats in, itâs âgame over.â Innovation would be illegal, just like it is in healthcare and education. Once politicians sink their teeth in, you can forget about resuming progress after six months. As the great Milton Friedman once said, âNothing is so permanent as a temporary government program.â Stephen McBride
Chief Analyst, RiskHedge PS: If you missed my recent discussion on AI with RiskHedge Chief Investment Officer Chris Wood, [go here now]( (or click the image below). We cover the best ways to act on the AI revolution. And Chris shares details on what he believes is the most immediately lucrative investing opportunity in AI. Itâs a tiny stock (under $2/share) using AI to analyze satellite imagery⦠[Check it out here.]( Suggested Reading... [The #1 way to trade America's "reshoring" megatrend](
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