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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Quispe, Alexander
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.25438
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author Quispe, Alexander
author_facet Quispe, Alexander
contents We study whether adoption of an AI coding assistant causally expands the technological frontier of individual software developers. We exploit the staggered rollout of Claude Code across GitHub between May 2025 and January 2026 in a panel of 5,838 developers observed monthly over 28 months, with treatment defined by the developer's first Claude-co-authored commit and not-yet-treated developers as controls. Using the doubly robust Callaway and Sant'Anna (2021) estimator, we find positive and significant effects on monthly commits (+41), repositories contributed to (+1.5), distinct programming languages used (+0.83), Shannon language entropy (+0.14), newly-used languages (+0.31), and cumulative lifetime languages (+0.51). The cumulative-languages effect grows with time since adoption, matching a Bayesian-learning model in which AI provides free signals about unfamiliar technologies and lowers the switching barrier. Results are robust to two stricter activity filters. The estimates document a sharp, persistent shift in developer behavior coincident with AI adoption; identification limits prevent a strict causal claim and we outline an agenda for cleaner tests.
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spellingShingle Coding Beyond Your Training: Claude Code and the Technological Frontier of Software Developers
Quispe, Alexander
General Economics
Economics
We study whether adoption of an AI coding assistant causally expands the technological frontier of individual software developers. We exploit the staggered rollout of Claude Code across GitHub between May 2025 and January 2026 in a panel of 5,838 developers observed monthly over 28 months, with treatment defined by the developer's first Claude-co-authored commit and not-yet-treated developers as controls. Using the doubly robust Callaway and Sant'Anna (2021) estimator, we find positive and significant effects on monthly commits (+41), repositories contributed to (+1.5), distinct programming languages used (+0.83), Shannon language entropy (+0.14), newly-used languages (+0.31), and cumulative lifetime languages (+0.51). The cumulative-languages effect grows with time since adoption, matching a Bayesian-learning model in which AI provides free signals about unfamiliar technologies and lowers the switching barrier. Results are robust to two stricter activity filters. The estimates document a sharp, persistent shift in developer behavior coincident with AI adoption; identification limits prevent a strict causal claim and we outline an agenda for cleaner tests.
title Coding Beyond Your Training: Claude Code and the Technological Frontier of Software Developers
topic General Economics
Economics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.25438