Connect with us
DAPA Banner
DAPA Coin
DAPA
COIN PAYMENT ASSET
PRIVACY · BLOCKDAG · HOMOMORPHIC ENCRYPTION · RUST
ElGamal Encrypted MINE DAPA
🚫 GENESIS SOLD OUT
DAPAPAY COMING

Business

AI could spark historic US productivity boom without overregulation: report

Published

on

AI could spark historic US productivity boom without overregulation: report

FIRST ON FOX: A new report is pushing back on artificial intelligence “doomsday” fears, arguing the technology could unleash one of the biggest productivity booms in American history — unless Washington slows it down with premature regulation.

The Unleash Prosperity report, titled “Boomsday Not Doomsday,” argues AI is more than another software tool, saying it could make expertise cheaper, expand access to services and raise living standards.

Advertisement

“I would say that, because of AI, we are headed toward the single greatest productivity revolution in American history,” Stephen Moore, co-founder of Unleash Prosperity, told FOX Business. “There’s almost no question about it.”

Critics, however, warn that AI also carries serious risks, including job losses, cyberattacks, disinformation and misuse by bad actors. Some experts worry companies and countries may rush to develop AI too quickly, putting speed ahead of safety.

BESSENT LAYS OUT 5 PRINCIPLES GUIDING TRUMP ADMIN’S APPROACH TO ECONOMIC STATECRAFT

High-tech data center with server racks

Rows of servers glow inside a data center. The new report argues AI could spark one of the biggest productivity booms in American history. (iStock / iStock)

The Unleash Prosperity report says that AI could help doctors spend more time with patients, allow teachers to personalize lessons, help builders cut delays, improve manufacturing quality and give small businesses access to more tools.

Advertisement

“AI makes routine cognitive work cheaper,” the report states. “… These incremental improvements add up to enormous benefits when doctors, teachers, contractors, and other professionals spend more of their day on real work and less on paperwork and bureaucracy.”

Moore said AI could also play a major role in addressing affordability, including housing costs.

“The cost of building a home will be cut in half due to AI,” Moore said. “There’s a lot of talk about affordability and how nobody can afford to buy a house. … If you cut the cost of building a house in half, all of a sudden it’s a lot more affordable.”

The report additionally pushes back on fears that AI will wipe out millions of jobs, saying similar concerns have followed previous breakthroughs, including tractors and computers.

Advertisement

“Every major invention of the last 100 years has made the American economy more productive and led to more jobs, not less,” Moore said.

NOBEL ECONOMIST WARNS AI DOOMSDAY JOB FEARS COULD BECOME SELF-FULFILLING PROPHECY

A warehouse worker is pictured next to boxes.

A warehouse worker stands among stacked boxes. The report says AI could automate routine tasks while creating higher-value roles for workers. (iStock / iStock)

The report points to agriculture as one example. 

In 1900, nearly 40% of the U.S. workforce worked in agriculture, compared with less than 2% today, while America produces far more food. Moore said AI could similarly move workers into new, higher-value roles rather than eliminate work altogether.

Advertisement

Moore said the fear around AI often comes from focusing on the potential risks rather than the benefits.

“I think people are afraid,” he said. “There’s a kind of fear that this is going to be like ‘The Terminator’ in the future, and people are looking at the potential risks, not the incredible advances in human welfare from technology.”

AI adoption is already moving faster than earlier technological revolutions. More than half of U.S. adults have used generative AI within three years of its mass-market release, outpacing the early adoption of personal computers and the internet, as noted in the report.

MICROSOFT CEO HAS A WARNING ABOUT THE AI RACE

Advertisement
Nurse working on patient chart

A medical professional fills out a patient chart. The report says AI could help doctors spend less time on paperwork and more time with patients. (iStock / iStock)

“This is as big as the invention of the wheel. It’s as big as the invention of electricity. It’s bigger than the internet,” Moore said. “It’s going to make life on Earth better … but we need to make sure America leads.”

GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE

Moore added that the U.S. cannot afford to slow down while China races ahead in AI development and adoption.

“The race is on. Let’s win the race,” Moore said.

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Click to comment

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Leave a Reply

Business

What It Means for the UK

Published

on

Britain's distillers have been handed an unexpected fillip after Donald Trump announced the removal of all US tariffs and restrictions on whisky imports, a concession the president attributed directly to the influence of King Charles and Queen Camilla's four-day state visit to America.

Donald Trump has threatened to slap a 100% import tariff on any country that introduces a digital services tax on America’s technology giants, a move that throws fresh uncertainty over Britain’s own levy and the recently struck UK-US trade understanding.

Writing on his Truth Social platform, the US president claimed “numerous European countries” had been weighing up such a charge, with some close to bringing one in. He warned that the penalties would take effect immediately and would entirely “supersede” any existing bilateral trade agreements.

“Please let this statement serve to represent that any Country that imposes such a Tax will immediately be met with a 100% TARIFF on any and all Goods sent to the United States of America,” he wrote.

While the post is aimed squarely at nations planning the “imminent implementation” of new levies, the implications for the UK are far from clear. London has had a digital services tax on the books since 2020, well before the latest wave of European proposals that appear to have prompted the president’s intervention.

Britain’s 2% Digital Services Tax applies to major search engines, social media platforms and online marketplaces with worldwide revenues from their digital businesses topping £500 million and total UK revenues above £25 million. It is calculated only on the revenue tied to British users.

Advertisement

The charge bites on some of the largest names in American business, among them Apple, Google, Meta and Amazon. According to the Treasury, it raised more than £800 million in 2024-25, up from £678 million the year before, making it a useful and growing source of revenue for the Exchequer.

The tax has long been a source of irritation in Washington. Back in April, Trump said the UK faced “a big tariff” for what he characterised as targeting major American companies. “They think they’re going to make an easy buck, that’s why they’ve all taken advantage of our country,” he said at the time.

The Department for Business and Trade and the Treasury have been approached for comment.

The threat lands just days after the US and EU finalised a new trade deal, and the timing is unlikely to be coincidental. Michael Damianos, minister of energy, commerce and industry for the Republic of Cyprus, said the bloc “can respond swiftly and proportionately when the deal is not respected or its interests are at stake”.

Advertisement

France, Italy and Spain each levy a 3% digital services tax on large companies operating within their borders, and several other EU member states have implemented or proposed similar measures, according to the Tax Foundation, a non-profit body focused on tax policy. Amazon earlier this year raised its fees on sellers, citing precisely these taxes.

The latest salvo fits a now-familiar pattern. Trump has sought to impose sweeping tariffs on dozens of trading partners since returning to office in 2025, with mixed success. The US Supreme Court in February struck down his earlier attempt to apply a blanket global tariff of 10%.

That has not slowed the broader campaign. Washington recently announced fresh tariffs of between 10% and 12.5% on dozens of countries accounting for almost all of its imports, on the grounds that those nations are not doing enough to tackle forced labour, a move that has already caught UK exporters in its net.

For British firms, the stakes are considerable. US tariffs on UK goods have already climbed sharply over the past year, and a 100% duty triggered by the digital services tax would dwarf anything seen so far. With the ink barely dry on the UK-US trade understanding, ministers now face an uncomfortable choice between defending a levy worth the better part of £1 billion a year and shielding exporters from a potential tariff shock.

Advertisement

Amy Ingham

Amy is a newly qualified journalist specialising in business journalism at Business Matters with responsibility for news content for what is now the UK’s largest print and online source of current business news.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Business

Gold price fall triggers margin calls on bullet loans

Published

on

Gold price fall triggers margin calls on bullet loans
Kolkata: A sharp fall in gold prices over the past five months has triggered margin calls on some gold loans, particularly bullet repayment loans, while loans with regular monthly repayments have remained largely insulated, people aware of the matter said.

Local gold prices have corrected about 22% from their peak in the last week of January. The metal fell about 15% in March amid the West Asia conflict before remaining range-bound for some time. Prices came under renewed pressure after the US Federal Reserve signalled that policy rates could remain higher for longer.

The price of 24-carat gold in India is currently around ₹1.40 lakh per 10 grams, compared with its peak of ₹1.82 lakh on January 29. A margin call arises when lenders ask borrowers to either repay part of the loan or pledge additional collateral. In gold loans, a fall in gold prices reduces the value of the pledged gold and pushes up the loan-to-value (LTV) ratio if the outstanding loan remains unchanged, prompting lenders to seek additional margin.

Gold has a Downside, too Rout Sparks Margin Calls, Puts Bullet Loans Under StressAgencies

Bullion Blues: Lump-sum repayment loans feel the heat as collateral values decline, while EMI-linked loans remain largely insulated; lenders say risks manageable despite correction

The stress has been visible in bullet repayment loans, where borrowers do not make monthly instalments but repay the principal and accumulated interest in a lump sum at the end of the tenure. Since the outstanding principal does not decline during the loan period, these loans are more vulnerable to a fall in collateral value.
Until March, most short-tenure gold loans offered by non-bank lenders carried a bullet repayment or anytime repayment option without prepayment charges, said the chief executive of a large gold loan company. From April 1, the Reserve Bank of India capped the LTV ratio at 85% for gold loans below ₹2.5 lakh, 80% for loans between ₹2.5 lakh and ₹5 lakh, and 75% for loans above ₹5 lakh. Most lenders ET spoke to, however, said they maintain average LTVs well below the regulatory ceiling to provide an additional cushion.

Advertisement


With the new gold loan framework taking effect from April 1, non-bank lenders have begun shifting towards EMI-based products.
“Regular EMI payments steadily reduce the outstanding principal of a gold loan, effectively lowering its loan-to-value ratio,” said Sachin Seth, regional managing director, CRIF India & South Asia. “Within a few months, this creates a protective equity cushion, shielding the loan from margin calls triggered by minor market corrections in gold prices.”Lenders said the risks remain manageable despite the correction in gold prices. “We have no such risk at this point of time, even if prices come down further, as we manage the LTV constantly. These being shorter-term loans, we can keep managing this during renewals or fresh bookings,” said managing director of a private bank. “Unless there is a 10% fall in a single day, there is not much to worry about. When prices come down gradually, the situation can be managed,” the person added.

Continue Reading

Business

Goldman Sachs International Small Cap Insights Fund Q1 2026 Commentary

Published

on

Diamond Hill International Fund Q1 2026 Commentary (DHIIX)

Goldman Sachs International Small Cap Insights Fund Q1 2026 Commentary

Continue Reading

Business

Mining leads Goldfields-Esperance major projects investment landscape

Published

on

Mining leads Goldfields-Esperance major projects investment landscape

The resources sector is responsible for the bulk of major investment in the Goldfields-Esperance region

Continue Reading

Business

Oil prices rise after US-Iran flareup; Qatar talks in focus

Published

on


Oil prices rise after US-Iran flareup; Qatar talks in focus

Continue Reading

Business

UK companies turn gloomiest this year on growth, CBI says

Published

on

UK companies turn gloomiest this year on growth, CBI says


UK companies turn gloomiest this year on growth, CBI says

Continue Reading

Business

Philippines leads the world in rush to solar as power prices soar

Published

on

Philippines leads the world in rush to solar as power prices soar


Philippines leads the world in rush to solar as power prices soar

Continue Reading

Business

Record heatwave disrupts Europe as France warns death toll to rise

Published

on

Record heatwave disrupts Europe as France warns death toll to rise


Record heatwave disrupts Europe as France warns death toll to rise

Continue Reading

Business

Capricious, violent, arbitrary: Venezuela’s twin quakes

Published

on

Capricious, violent, arbitrary: Venezuela’s twin quakes


Capricious, violent, arbitrary: Venezuela’s twin quakes

Continue Reading

Business

Sovereign investors with $29 trillion pivot to energy assets, flag dollar fears

Published

on

Sovereign investors with $29 trillion pivot to energy assets, flag dollar fears


Sovereign investors with $29 trillion pivot to energy assets, flag dollar fears

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2025