Governor Newsom's new dashboard correlates AI exposure metrics with unemployment claims, and the early data tells an interesting story
California just became the first state to build a public dashboard that tracks whether artificial intelligence is actually costing people their jobs.
Governor Gavin Newsom introduced the California AI-Unemployment Tracker, or CAIT, on June 25. The tool, developed in partnership with the California Policy Lab at UCLA and the state’s Employment Development Department, cross-references occupational AI exposure metrics with unemployment insurance claims in something close to real time.
What the data actually shows #
The initial findings through May 2026 show no statewide surge in unemployment claims among workers in AI-exposed occupations. But the tracker has flagged localized increases in claims among college-educated workers in high-exposure roles.
The San Francisco Bay Area and tech-adjacent sectors like information services and professional services have shown elevated claims since the launch of ChatGPT-3.5 in late 2022.
CAIT updates its data monthly, with public downloads available for anyone who wants to dig into the numbers.
The policy machinery behind the tracker #
The tracker was preceded by an executive order issued on May 21, 2026, which directed state agencies to prepare for potential labor market disruptions caused by AI. That order mandated the development of data tools and workforce support strategies, essentially laying the bureaucratic groundwork for CAIT to exist.
California is home to many of the world’s leading private AI companies, from OpenAI to Anthropic to Google DeepMind’s operations. The choice to partner with UCLA’s California Policy Lab rather than build the tool entirely in-house lends methodological credibility and creates a pipeline for ongoing research that can evolve as AI capabilities change.
What this means for investors and the broader market #
The monthly data releases from CAIT will function as a new data stream for investors in AI companies, enterprise software, and human capital management firms, offering a government-validated signal about which sectors are experiencing actual displacement versus fear of displacement.
Early data shows concentrated impacts among educated professionals in tech hubs rather than broad-based job losses, suggesting the first wave of AI displacement is hitting the demographic that typically drives consumer spending in high-cost metro areas. If that trend accelerates, the downstream effects on housing markets, tax revenues, and regional economies in places like San Francisco could be substantial.
If CAIT’s model proves successful, other states may replicate it. Companies in the workforce development and edtech spaces could see tailwinds from government spending directed by this kind of data. Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our