$55 billion in hypothetical AI equity contributions from Anthropic and OpenAI would produce only about $20 a year per American, Kevin Frazier argued, calling profit-sharing too small to drive an economic transition.
A 3% equity giveaway from the two labs, even compounded at 10% annually to roughly $140 billion in a decade, would still support only a 4% payout rate under the public-wealth-fund model he examined.
A 0.2% annual tax on broadly defined AI companies, including chipmakers, would also deliver at best only a few hundred dollars per person, he wrote, even if funds were redirected toward more insecure communities.
Frazier said the bigger risk is political: once Congress passes a fund or tax, leaders may treat the AI transition as solved while harder reforms on licensing, retraining and family formation remain unaddressed.
He framed profit-sharing as one marginal tool rather than a standalone fix, urging policymakers to shift attention from simple dividend schemes to broader labor-market and social-policy changes.