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Main Authors: Farach, Alex, Cambon, Alexia, Spataro, Jared
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2505.09408
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author Farach, Alex
Cambon, Alexia
Spataro, Jared
author_facet Farach, Alex
Cambon, Alexia
Spataro, Jared
contents As the digital economy grows increasingly intangible, traditional productivity measures struggle to capture the true economic impact of artificial intelligence (AI). AI systems capable of cognitive work significantly enhance productivity, yet their contributions remain obscured within the residual category of Total Factor Productivity (TFP). This paper explores whether it is time for a conceptual shift to explicitly recognize "digital labor," the autonomous cognitive capability of AI, as a distinct factor of production alongside capital and human labor. We outline the unique economic properties of digital labor, including scalability, intangibility, self-improvement, rapid obsolescence, and elastic substitutability. By integrating digital labor into growth models (such as those by Solow and Romer), we demonstrate strategic implications for business leaders, including new approaches to productivity tracking, resource allocation, investment strategy, and organizational design. Ultimately, treating digital labor as an independent factor offers a clearer view of economic growth and helps organizations manage AI's transformative potential.
format Preprint
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institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Evolving the Productivity Equation: Should Digital Labor Be Considered a New Factor of Production?
Farach, Alex
Cambon, Alexia
Spataro, Jared
Theoretical Economics
As the digital economy grows increasingly intangible, traditional productivity measures struggle to capture the true economic impact of artificial intelligence (AI). AI systems capable of cognitive work significantly enhance productivity, yet their contributions remain obscured within the residual category of Total Factor Productivity (TFP). This paper explores whether it is time for a conceptual shift to explicitly recognize "digital labor," the autonomous cognitive capability of AI, as a distinct factor of production alongside capital and human labor. We outline the unique economic properties of digital labor, including scalability, intangibility, self-improvement, rapid obsolescence, and elastic substitutability. By integrating digital labor into growth models (such as those by Solow and Romer), we demonstrate strategic implications for business leaders, including new approaches to productivity tracking, resource allocation, investment strategy, and organizational design. Ultimately, treating digital labor as an independent factor offers a clearer view of economic growth and helps organizations manage AI's transformative potential.
title Evolving the Productivity Equation: Should Digital Labor Be Considered a New Factor of Production?
topic Theoretical Economics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2505.09408