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The ‘Productivity Paradox’ of AI Adoption in Manufacturing Firms

AI may promise efficiency, but in manufacturing the payoff comes only after surviving the dip

OpenAI

Kristin Burnham
Mon, 09/08/2025 - 12:03
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Companies that adopt industrial artificial intelligence see productivity losses before longer-term gains, according to new research.

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Organizations have long viewed artificial intelligence as a way to achieve productivity gains. But recent research about AI adoption at U.S. manufacturing firms reveals a more nuanced reality: AI introduction frequently leads to a measurable but temporary decline in performance, followed by stronger growth output, revenue, and employment.

This phenomenon, which follows a “J-curve” trajectory, helps explain why the economic effect of AI has been underwhelming at times, despite its transformative potential.

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Submitted by Garth Conrad (not verified) on Mon, 09/08/2025 - 09:31

Technology change

This resonates with the broader challenges of integrating Industry 4.0 technologies. The study's focus on complementary investments, like infrastructure and staff training, suggests that the "J-curve" is not unique to AI, but rather a pattern that applies to any transformative technology requiring deep organizational change. The fact that older firms even see a decline in structured management practices after adopting AI is a compelling example of this disruption.

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