データセンターから『肉の1ポンド』を:AIによる雇用喪失に対するある上院議員の答え
AIによる雇用喪失への懸念が高まる中、上院議員マーク・ワーナーはデータセンターへの課税を提案し、労働者の移行支援を図っている。
キーポイント
AI雇用喪失への懸念の高まり
AI技術の進展に伴う雇用喪失への懸念が急速に拡大しており、これがデータセンターへの反発を煽っている。
データセンター課税の提案
上院議員マーク・ワーナーがデータセンターへの課税を提案し、その税収を労働者の移行支援に充てることを示唆している。
政策対応の必要性
AIによる経済的変革に対応するため、具体的な政策措置の検討が始まっていることを示している。
影響分析・編集コメントを表示
影響分析
この記事は、AI技術の社会的影響に対する政策対応の初期段階を示しており、業界にとって規制環境の変化を予見させる重要な兆候である。データセンター業界への課税提案は、AIインフラに対する新たなコスト要因となる可能性がある。
編集コメント
AIの社会的影響に対する政策対応の具体化が始まったことを示す初期の事例。業界関係者は今後の規制動向に注視すべき。
データセンターから『肉一ポンド』を:AIによる雇用喪失へのある上院議員の答え
AIによる雇用喪失への懸念が急速に高まっており、データセンターに対する反発をあおっています。マーク・ワーナー上院議員は、労働者がこの移行期を乗り切るのを支援するため、データセンターへの課税を提案しています。
原文を表示
The signs that AI could lead to mass job displacement are already piling up: Entry-level job postings in the U.S. have sunk 35% since 2023, mass layoffs have swept across Big Tech, and even AI leaders are warning about what’s coming.
Backstage at the Axios AI Summit in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday, Sen. Mark Warner (D-VA) said a venture capitalist recently told him he’s writing software investments down to zero in large part due to the strides of Anthropic’s Claude, and a major law firm told him it’s not hiring first-year associates because AI can now handle much of the work once assigned to junior lawyers.
Warner says the fear of AI-related job loss is “palpable,” even as data from one AI company suggests AI hasn’t yet started taking jobs. As those fears grow, they’re bleeding over into a different fight, which is who should foot the bill.
Warner has a proposal: tax the data centers powering the AI boom and use that revenue to help workers through the transition. He hasn’t introduced legislation yet, but the idea is gaining urgency as public anger toward AI and data centers grows.
Across the U.S., there’s been pushback on data centers, including a bill on Wednesday introduced by Sen. Bernie Sanders (D-VT) and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY), calling for a data center moratorium. The loudest concerns are about noise, pollution, and rising electricity costs. But there’s a bubbling resentment underneath those concerns, a resistance to suffering the potential ill effects of having a data center in your backyard that powers the technology some fear will replace workers.
Warner doesn’t plan to support his colleagues’ bill. Onstage at the event, he said: “A data center moratorium simply means China is gonna move quicker, and this is one where we can’t lose.”
There’s no stuffing the genie back into the bottle when it comes to AI and data centers, he added. And while Warner believes in strict requirements that ensure data centers don’t pass their water and power costs to residents, he told TechCrunch he thinks there’s another way for communities to extract their “pound of flesh” in a way that addresses the underlying job loss fears.
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“I’ve thought for a long time there’s an obligation from the industry to help figure this out and help pay for it, but one of the questions I was asking was, Who should pay?” Warner told TechCrunch. “Should it be the chip makers, Jensen [Huang, Nvidia’s CEO]? Should it be the large language model companies? Should it be the Goldman Sachs of the world who are using these tools to cut back on a number of first-year associates?”
Ultimately, he said, he thinks the “easiest place to extract the pound of flesh is probably going to be from the data centers.”
That could look like putting data center tax revenue toward training for new nurses or funding AI upskilling programs — so long as there’s a “tangible benefit to communities” as they navigate this economic transition AI companies have foisted on them.
Warner sees it as a way to balance the need to build data centers with some obligation to the communities bearing their costs.
The idea is not without precedent. Warner pointed to Henrico County, Virginia, which used the tax revenue from a local data center to kickstart a new affordable housing project.
Finding a way to connect data centers to a tangible benefit to the community will be essential, he says, because otherwise, “the pitchforks are coming out.”
The public mood suggests he could be on to something. According to a recent NBC News poll, AI has a lower public approval rating than Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), with 46% of registered voters viewing AI negatively compared to only 26% viewing it positively. In Virginia, that is playing out in a proposal to repeal the state’s tax breaks for data center buildouts, which cost the state and localities nearly $2 billion a year in lost tax revenue in one of the world’s largest data center markets. Warner says other states might follow suit.
AI and data centers, he said, are “easy to demonize.”
Rebecca Bellan is a senior reporter at TechCrunch where she covers the business, policy, and emerging trends shaping artificial intelligence. Her work has also appeared in Forbes, Bloomberg, The Atlantic, The Daily Beast, and other publications.
You can contact or verify outreach from Rebecca by emailing rebecca.bellan@techcrunch.com or via encrypted message at rebeccabellan.491 on Signal.
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