Why does Steve Keen think AI will cause a financial crash soon?
He argues AI investment is following a Schumpeterian boom–bust pattern: massive overinvestment (everyone racing to be dominant) followed by a slump once the technology undercuts existing businesses, and current metrics show spending far outstripping revenue.
What is the significance of the $720 billion figure for 2026?
Keen cites forecasts that major tech firms will spend about $720B on AI infrastructure in 2026, which is less than 20% of the revenue that spending implies — a 5:1 investment-to-income ratio that historically signals unsustainability.
How high are AI startup and pilot failure rates according to the video?
The video states AI-specific startup failure has hit roughly 90% in 2026, and about 95% of enterprise AI pilots never move into production after incurring large costs.
What practical steps does the conversation recommend for individuals and companies?
Recommendations include setting aside cash, diversifying into assets you expect to survive a contraction, and rethinking hiring—prioritizing deep experts, AI-proficient staff, and roles unlikely to be automated—while acknowledging full insulation may be impossible.
Why does the speaker advocate universal basic income (UBI)?
Because AI and robotics could eliminate a large share of jobs, UBI is presented as a social safety net to support those displaced and preserve societal stability amid widespread labor disruption.
What does the discussion say about Bitcoin and energy use?
The conversation warns that Bitcoin and similar cryptocurrencies are highly energy-intensive and fragile as stores of value; Keen suggests Bitcoin could collapse, and energy consumption for crypto is a global concern.