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[ARTICLE · art-20923] src=nber.org pub= topic=artificial-intelligence verified=true sentiment=· neutral

Writing Code vs. Shipping Code: Productivity Effects Across AI Tool Generations

A study of over 100,000 GitHub developers found that successive generations of AI coding tools—autocomplete, interactive agents, and autonomous agents—boosted coding commits by 40%, 140%, and 180% respectively. However, those gains sharply diminished further down the production chain, with the 180% increase falling to just 50% for new projects and 30% for actual software releases. The researchers attribute this attenuation to human bottlenecks, estimating a strong complementarity between AI and human effort, and found that across four major app marketplaces, the surge in coding activity led to only a moderate increase in new apps with no rise in total usage.

read1 min publishedJun 3, 2026

How do the productivity effects of AI evolve across successive generations of tools, and to what extent do task-level gains ultimately translate into final output? We study these questions in the context of software development, using data on more than 100,000 GitHub developers combined with their AI usage telemetry. In a matched event study design, we find that autocomplete, interactive coding agents, and autonomous coding agents each significantly increase coding activity (“commits”), with respective cumulative effects of 40%, 140%, and 180%. These gains, however, attenuate sharply across the production hierarchy: the 180% cumulative effect falls to 50% for the number of projects, and to 30% for actual releases. This pattern is consistent with the weak-link hypothesis: the strong productivity gains from AI are attenuated by human bottlenecks in the production chain, with an estimated elasticity of substitution of 0.25 between AI and human effort, which indicates strong complementarities. We further confirm these results across four major app marketplaces, finding a moderate increase in the number of new apps but no increase in total usage. Large task-level AI productivity gains have therefore translated only partially into shipped and used software thus far.

Copy CitationMert Demirer, Leon Musolff, and Liyuan Yang, "Writing Code vs. Shipping Code: Productivity Effects Across Generations of AI Coding Tools," NBER Working Paper 35275 (2026), https://doi.org/10.3386/w35275.Download Citation

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