More than half a billion people globally actively use OpenAI’s AI tools, particularly the freely available ChatGPT. They send over 2.5 billion messages to the platform daily—including more than 330 million per day in the United States. This widespread usage offers a unique perspective on AI’s impact on the economy. ChatGPT has saved teachers nearly six hours per week on tasks; saved state workers in Pennsylvania an average of 95 minutes a day on repetitive tasks, allowing them to deliver better services; and enabled entrepreneurs to launch new companies and startups.
Today, OpenAI is sharing its first insights into how tools like ChatGPT have enhanced productivity for workers across businesses and governments—and how that is already generating economic value. The analysis is authored by OpenAI Chief Economist Ronnie Chatterji and the OpenAI Economic Research team.
Additionally, OpenAI is announcing that Chatterji, along with Jason Furman from Harvard University and Michael Strain from the American Enterprise Institute and Georgetown University, will collaborate for 12 months to assess AI’s impact on productivity and the workforce. Together, they will develop a research agenda and metrics to analyze AI’s effect on employment, an initiative that will be based in the new OpenAI Workshop in Washington, D.C., along with training sessions, demonstrations, and other programs for key economic stakeholders.
ChatGPT is the fastest-adopted consumer technology in history, reaching 1 million users in five days, 100 million users in two months, and over 500 million users today. Since its launch, there has been a significant increase in the use of ChatGPT for work-related tasks. Currently, 28% of employed U.S. adults who have ever used ChatGPT report using it at work, compared to just 8% in 2023.
Throughout history, certain technologies have fundamentally changed what people can achieve—the wheel, the engine, electricity, the transistor. AI represents a similar transformative technology. At its core, AI is helping people scale their ability to think, learn, create, and build. It is amplifying human ingenuity itself. As these systems continue to improve, the economic benefits are expected to be substantial.
Economists differ in their projections regarding AI’s impact on productivity, but even at the lower end, AI will expand the economic pie. The most pressing questions are: how will that expansion unfold, and who benefits the most?
The decisions made today will determine whether this transformation leads to greater opportunities for all or greater concentration of wealth and power among a few. At OpenAI, the goal is for everyone to benefit from the “up elevator” of AI.
Early signs of this potential are already visible: scientists accelerating discovery, small business owners expanding their capabilities, and teachers preparing lessons more efficiently. Imagine what is possible when these tools are accessible to everyone.
This extraordinary potential does not mean progress will follow a straight path. Every major technological shift brings change; some jobs disappear, others evolve, and new jobs emerge. The pace and scale of change with AI will likely be greater and faster than previous technological revolutions. It is important to acknowledge this reality and prepare accordingly.
The task is not to halt this change but to guide it. History shows that new technologies can expand opportunities and improve life for everyone—but only if access is democratized, workers are supported through transitions, and economic systems are designed to reward broad participation and contribution.
— news from OpenAI
— News Original —
OpenAI’s new economic analysis
Over half a billion people around the world actively use OpenAI’s AI tools, especially our freely available ChatGPT. They send more than 2.5 billion messages to the platform per day – including more than 330 million per day in the US. This breadth of use offers a unique window onto AI’s impacts on the economy. ChatGPT has saved teachers nearly six hours per week (opens in a new window) on tasks; saved state workers in Pennsylvania an average of 95 minutes a day (opens in a new window) on rote tasks so they can deliver better services; and enabled entrepreneurs to build new companies and start-ups. (opens in a new window)
Today, OpenAI is releasing our first look (opens in a new window) at how our tools like ChatGPT have boosted productivity for workers across businesses and governments – and how that’s already creating value. The note is authored by OpenAI Chief Economist Ronnie Chatterji and the OpenAI Economic Research team.
We’re also announcing today that Chatterji, along with Jason Furman of Harvard University and Michael Strain of the American Enterprise Institute and Georgetown University, are undertaking a 12-month collaboration to assess AI’s impact on productivity and the workforce. Together, they will develop a research agenda and metrics to analyze AI’s effect on jobs, an effort that will be housed in the new OpenAI Workshop in Washington, DC, along with trainings, demos, and other programming for key economic stakeholders.
ChatGPT is the fastest-adopted consumer technology in history, reaching 1 million users in five days, 100 million users in two months, and over 500 million users today. Since launch, we have seen a dramatic increase in use of ChatGPT for work. Today, 28% of employed US adults who have ever used ChatGPT report using ChatGPT at work, compared to just 8% (opens in a new window) in 2023.
Throughout history, certain technologies have fundamentally changed what people can achieve – the wheel, the engine, electricity, the transistor. AI is a similar transformative technology. At its core, AI is helping people scale their ability to think, learn, create, and build. It’s scaling human ingenuity itself. As these systems improve, the economic benefits are expected to be significant.
Economists differ in their projections for how AI will impact productivity, but even at the lower end, AI will expand the economic pie. The most pressing questions are: how will that expansion unfold, and who gets what slice?
The choices we make today will shape whether this transformation leads to greater opportunity for all, or greater concentration of wealth and power for the few. At OpenAI, we want everyone to be on the “up elevator” of AI.
We’re already seeing glimpses: scientists accelerating discovery, small business owners expanding their capacity, teachers preparing lessons faster. Imagine what’s possible when these tools are in everyone’s hands.
This extraordinary potential doesn’t mean progress will move in a straight line. Every major technological shift brings change; some jobs disappear, others evolve, new jobs emerge. The pace and scale of change with AI will likely be bigger and faster than what’s come before. We need to be honest about this fact and prepare now.
Our task isn’t to stop this change, but to guide it. History shows that new technologies can expand opportunity and make life better for everyone – but only if we democratize access, support workers through changing times, and build economic systems that reward broad contribution and participation.