Australia

Tech giant’s tips for Australia to catch the AI wave

1 July 2025 03:30 | News

According to the company behind the industrial giant Chatgpt, tax incentives and artificial intelligence lessons can help Australia not to miss the benefits of the AI ​​wave.

For Openai Chief economist Ronnie Chatterji, a visit to Australia to discuss with business leaders, investors and policy makers is coming.

In August, the Federal government embraced the country’s mission to improve the country’s stagnant productivity increase and improve living standards and improve living standards.

Dr Chatterji told AAP in a statement, “It is a good time in economic policy circles about how to increase productivity right now,” he said.

AI said in an economic plan for Australia, published on Tuesday, and said that AI could release workers from ordinary administrative duties and make the economy more productive and more prosperous.

“A nurse who has not been loaded with documents can spend more time with patients,” the report said.

“A business owner with more bandwidth can get bold ideas.”

However, in order to achieve this utopian vision, governments should encourage adoption with targeted investment and extra training.

Tax incentives should be presented to increase the capacity of the enterprise and the labor force to increase adoption and increase training programs.

Openai Chief Economist Ronnie Chatterji is in Australia to meet with business leaders. (Lukas Coch/AAP Photos)

In education, artificial intelligence literacy and ethical lessons should be given to schools in order to give students the ability to use technology when they enter the labor force.

Dr Chatterji said Australia has the potential to benefit from AI.

The geographical location near Southeast Asia, the powerful software sector summarized by companies such as Canva and Atlassan and abundant renewable energy sources made it an excellent place to invest in data centers to strengthen technology.

It was launched as a general purpose technology that could transform the entire economy, such as AI, electricity or steam engine.

However, like the industrial revolutions of the past, fears have grown about the dislocation that the new technology will bring to the labor market.

The first work showed that AI has completed the workers and increased their productivity instead of eliminating them, Dr Dr Chatterji said.

Over time, the opinion that transformative technologies have eliminated the economy is shared by the Minister of Efficiency Andrew Leigh.

“The biggest risk of employment of artificial intelligence may not be at work – the biggest risk of employment may be working for a job that does not adopt it and is completely unsuccessful,” he said.

However, Dr Leigh admitted that the risk of removing grumbling studies was the risk of eliminating entry -level positions such as the role of elimination through case documents as a young lawyer.

Dr Chatterji, a former Biden Management Advisor, is having concerns about AI’s potential impact on work, privacy and misinformation, and insists that his company is determined to adapt to security and social values.

Chatgpt
Openai supports AI literacy and ethical lessons in schools to give students the right technology skills. (Alan Porritt/AAP Photos)

After revealing concerns that internal tests were very sycophantic, an Openai model has recently been released.

Dr Chatterji, although the industry shows an example of self -regulation, he added that governments will play a role in behavioral models and safety.

ACTU secretary Sally Mcmanus said that it is important to share the economic dividends brought by artificial intelligence with the workers and to swallow only corporate profits.

“We want to develop (productivity) because we want to improve the living standards of people,” he said.

“You must make sure you have a fair distribution of productivity gains and this can be with shorter working hours or higher wages.”


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