The Asymmetric AI Dividend: Labor, Education, and Public Services in Emerging Economies
Olaniyi Evans
Hequation Review, 2026, vol. 3, issue 1, 1-7
Abstract:
Artificial intelligence is reshaping labor markets, education systems, and public services at a pace that outstrips existing governance capacity in emerging economies. Drawing on current institutional data and peer-reviewed evidence, this article argues that the AI dividend is structurally asymmetric: emerging markets face roughly 40% job exposure with weaker complementarity than advanced economies, compounding inequality in the absence of deliberate policy. Kenya's global leadership in ChatGPT adoption signals demand-side readiness, while Africa's sub-1% share of global data-centre capacity signals a deepening supply-side deficit. Proactive investment in reskilling, public compute, and algorithmic accountability is the price of inclusion.
Keywords: artificial intelligence; labor market disruption; digital financial inclusion; AI governance; emerging economies (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: I15 J24 O15 O33 O55 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2026
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:heq:heqrev:v3y2026i1a1
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