Economy11:54 · 2h ago

AI Cost Surges Challenge Tech Executives After Workforce Cuts

YnetCenter
Translated & summarized from Ynet by baba
The story · English

A recent KPMG survey reveals that many international corporate leaders are facing unexpected high costs from increased artificial intelligence (AI) usage, challenging the assumption that AI adoption and workforce reductions lead to significant savings. Previously, AI companies subsidized large language model prices with fixed contracts, but rising computational expenses for running AI on server farms are now driving dramatic price increases across the tech sector.

Until recently, CEOs encouraged employees to maximize AI use for tasks like coding, a trend dubbed "token-maxing." Amazon even ranked workers based on AI token usage, while Meta incorporated AI use into performance reviews. However, companies are now reconsidering as AI tool costs spiral out of control after employees became reliant on them.

KPMG's report, based on a survey of 2,145 senior executives from 20 countries, found that 29% were surprised by escalating AI expenses. This suggests that at least a third of top managers globally embraced AI hype without strategic planning for efficient use. An Nvidia executive admitted spending more on AI costs for research teams than on employee salaries. Axios reported an unnamed company spent $500 million in one month on cloud AI usage due to lack of license restrictions. Another study found AI-heavy businesses spend about $7,500 per employee monthly on AI.

The findings highlight a concerning trend where many executives viewed AI as a simple replacement for workers without fully understanding the financial implications or operational realities. The Register notes that managerial misunderstanding of AI economics is a key barrier to successful workplace integration. As usage-based pricing models become more common, organizations are now developing capabilities to forecast, monitor, and manage AI expenditures effectively.

Additionally, AI is being used as a disciplinary tool in workplaces, with employees fearing job loss and hesitating to negotiate wages or benefits. Many managers leverage AI not only to justify widespread layoffs but also to intimidate remaining staff. The financial strain from AI costs has contributed to a global market situation some analysts compare unfavorably to the period before the Great Depression.

Read the original at Ynet
Open the live terminal