Ideas development
Ideas development
With the phenomenal rise of generative AI models (e.g., large language models such as GPT or large image models such as Diffusion), there are increasing concerns about human creativesÃÂ futures. Specifically, as generative modelsÃÂ power further increases, will they eventually replace all human creativesÃÂ jobs? We argue that the answer is ÃÂno,ÃÂ even if existing generative AI modelsÃÂ capabilities reach their theoretical limit. Our theory has a close analogy to a familiar insight in financial economics on the impossibility of an informationally efficient market [Grossman and Stiglitz (1980)]: If generative AI models can provide all the content humans need at low variable costs, then there is no incentive for humans to spend costly resources on content creation as they cannot profit from it. But if no human creates new content, then generative AI can only learn from stale information and be unable to generate up-to-date content that reflects new happenings in the physical world. This creates a paradox.
With the phenomenal rise of generative AI models (e.g., large language models such as GPT or large image models such as Diffusion), there are increasing concerns about human creativesÃÂ futures. Specifically, as generative modelsÃÂ power further increases, will they eventually replace all human creativesÃÂ jobs? We argue that the answer is ÃÂno,ÃÂ even if existing generative AI modelsÃÂ capabilities reach their theoretical limit. Our theory has a close analogy to a familiar insight in financial economics on the impossibility of an informationally efficient market [Grossman and Stiglitz (1980)]: If generative AI models can provide all the content humans need at low variable costs, then there is no incentive for humans to spend costly resources on content creation as they cannot profit from it. But if no human creates new content, then generative AI can only learn from stale information and be unable to generate up-to-date content that reflects new happenings in the physical world. This creates a paradox.

Keynote: "Lessons from fintech-academic collaborations"
25-27 August 2025
25/08/2025
Antonio Gargano
Keynote

Keynote: "Lessons from fintech-academic collaborations"
25-27 August 2025
25/08/2025
Antonio Gargano
Keynote

Keynote: "Leadership for finance professionals: A CEO-turned-leadership-scholar perspective"
25-27 August 2025
25/08/2025
Emilia Bunea
Keynote

Keynote: "Leadership for finance professionals: A CEO-turned-leadership-scholar perspective"
25-27 August 2025
25/08/2025
Emilia Bunea
Keynote

Keynote: "The promise of digital finance: Greater transparency, enhanced efficiency, and more effective and less burdensome regulation"
25-27 August 2025
26/08/2025
Allan Mendelowitz
Keynote

Keynote: "The promise of digital finance: Greater transparency, enhanced efficiency, and more effective and less burdensome regulation"
25-27 August 2025
26/08/2025
Allan Mendelowitz
Keynote

Keynote: "What we can learn today about the markets of tomorrow: Crypto, crashes and credible research"
25-27 August 2025
27/08/2025
Albert Menkveld
Keynote

Keynote: "What we can learn today about the markets of tomorrow: Crypto, crashes and credible research"
25-27 August 2025
27/08/2025