Hundreds of Experts Including 16 Nobel Laureates Urge World to Prepare Now for AI’s Economic Impact More than 200 economists and AI researchers, including 16 Nobel laureates, signed an open letter organized by Stanford University's Digital Economy Lab urging policymakers to prepare for AI's economic disruption, warning of large-scale job displacement without proactive measures. The letter calls for creating incentives, guardrails, and institutions to ensure AI benefits society broadly, as concrete job losses mount at companies like Amazon and the UN warns of widening inequality between nations. July 14, 2026, Inside AI — More than 200 economists and AI researchers, among them 16 Nobel laureates , signed an open letter on Monday demanding immediate action from policymakers and technology leaders to brace for artificial intelligence's sweeping economic disruption. The letter, organized by Stanford University's Digital Economy Lab , warns that AI's rapid advancement could trigger a transformation "larger than the Industrial Revolution, but unfolding over a vastly shorter time frame." Signatories argue that without proactive measures, large-scale job displacement looms, though they also acknowledge potential for major gains in living standards. The statement calls for creating "incentives, guardrails, and institutions" to ensure AI complements human labor and benefits society broadly. Anton Korinek , a University of Virginia professor who spearheaded the initiative, stressed urgency. "We cannot improvise our strategy and institutions in the middle of the transformation; waiting for certainty means arriving too late." The letter lands as concrete job losses mount. In October, Amazon announced roughly 14,000 job cuts, months after its CEO revealed generative AI and agents would assume certain roles. In the U.S., recent college graduates face a tightening labor market, with entry-level positions increasingly automated. Beyond individual workers, the United Nations cautioned in December that AI could widen inequality between nations. Wealthier economies may capture early productivity gains while developing countries risk falling further behind, lacking infrastructure and reskilling capacity. Beyond the Letter: A History of Warnings and Divergent Views This is not the first high-profile alarm. In 2015 , the Future of Life Institute published an open letter on AI safety signed by Stephen Hawking , Elon Musk , and hundreds of researchers. That letter focused more on existential risk; today's emphasizes immediate economic disruption. Yet the signatories are not monolithic. Some, like Daron Acemoglu of MIT , have argued that AI's impact on productivity and employment is far from predetermined and depends heavily on institutional choices. Others, such as Erik Brynjolfsson , director of the Stanford lab, have long advocated for a "human-centered" approach where AI augments rather than replaces workers. The letter's call for "guardrails" echoes recent policy moves. The European Union's AI Act , fully in force by 2026 , mandates risk assessments for high-stakes AI systems. In the U.S. , executive orders have pushed for workforce training and transparency, but comprehensive federal legislation remains stalled. What the Letter Leaves Unsaid Critics note the letter offers few specifics on which "institutions" are needed. Proposals from signatories in other venues include wage insurance, portable benefits, and massive investment in education. But the letter itself stops short of endorsing any single mechanism. Labor economist David Autor , not a signatory, has warned that without deliberate redesign of work, AI could erode the middle class. Meanwhile, Goldman Sachs estimated in 2023 that generative AI could expose 300 million jobs to automation globally, though history suggests technology also creates new roles. The letter's timing coincides with OpenAI and DeepMind racing toward more autonomous systems. As agents move from assisting to deciding, the gap between technological capability and social readiness widens. Korinek's group hopes the letter galvanizes concrete planning before labor markets are upended. Whether governments heed the call remains uncertain, but the signatories' prestige ensures the message will resonate in policy circles worldwide.