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Training for Obsolescence? The AI-Driven Education Trap

Published: August 27, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2508.19625v1

By: Andrew J. Peterson

Potential Business Impact:

AI in schools might hurt job skills later.

Business Areas:
Artificial Intelligence Artificial Intelligence, Data and Analytics, Science and Engineering, Software

Artificial intelligence simultaneously transforms human capital production in schools and its demand in labor markets. Analyzing these effects in isolation can lead to a significant misallocation of educational resources. We model an educational planner whose decision to adopt AI is driven by its teaching productivity, failing to internalize AI's future wage-suppressing effect on those same skills. Our core assumption, motivated by a pilot survey, is that there is a positive correlation between these two effects. This drives our central proposition: this information failure creates a skill mismatch that monotonically increases with AI prevalence. Extensions show the mismatch is exacerbated by the neglect of unpriced non-cognitive skills and by a school's endogenous over-investment in AI. Our findings caution that policies promoting AI in education, if not paired with forward-looking labor market signals, may paradoxically undermine students' long-term human capital, especially if reliance on AI crowds out the development of unpriced non-cognitive skills, such as persistence, that are forged through intellectual struggle.

Page Count
42 pages

Category
Economics:
General Economics