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AI Fuels Wealth Gap: U.S. Households See Gains, But Unevenly
29 Jan
Summary
- AI investment boosted U.S. household wealth by over 7%.
- K-shaped economy, reinforcing wealth disparity, may last until 2035.
- Bottom 50% wealth grew 1,189% since 2010, but still trails top 0.1%.

Massive investments in artificial intelligence have spurred a notable increase in average U.S. household wealth, estimated at over 7%. This economic boost, however, has primarily benefited high-income Americans, intensifying the K-shaped economic phenomenon. This divergence, where the fortunes of the wealthy rise while others struggle, is projected to continue until around 2035.
Economists note that while AI has the potential to eventually reduce inequality, current trends show a widening gap. Data from Q3 2010 revealed the bottom 50% held $330 billion, while the top 0.1% held $6.53 trillion. By Q3 2025, the bottom 50%'s wealth grew to $4.25 trillion, a 1,189% increase, yet the top 0.1%'s wealth surged to $24.89 trillion.
AI adoption is expected to follow an S-curve, starting slow and then accelerating before leveling off. Certain trade jobs may be protected from AI replacement, but a "hollowing out" of middle-skilled roles is anticipated. This could lead to job growth at the lower and upper ends of the income spectrum, with a potential contraction in the middle due to AI's ability to automate tasks.




