What they're not telling you: # AI vs Affordability And Rates **Corporations and governments are quietly planning to use AI-generated tax revenue to cushion citizens from job displacement, signaling they expect widespread unemployment but want to avoid public unrest without addressing root causes.** The convergence of artificial intelligence adoption and economic disruption is forcing policymakers to contemplate what was once considered fringe ideology: Universal Basic Income. South Korea's recent proposal to redirect AI-driven tax revenue toward citizens marks a watershed moment—not because it solves the problem, but because it reveals how thoroughly institutions expect AI to hollow out employment. Peter Tchir of Academy Securities notes this discussion is gaining political traction precisely as "uncertainty around jobs, income, and costs continue to weigh on overall confidence." The mainstream narrative frames this as benevolent forward-thinking.

Diana Reeves
The Take
Diana Reeves · Corporate Watchdog & Markets

# THE TAKE: AI's Affordability Lie Peter Tchir's hand-wringing about rate cuts misses the actual plot: AI deployment *requires* cheap money, and the Fed knows it. Tech oligopolies need negative real rates to justify astronomical valuations on speculative compute infrastructure. Every basis point matters when your $10B datacenter depends on borrowed capital at 2%, not 5%. This isn't about consumer affordability—it's about corporate debt serviceability. The AI boom doesn't cheapen goods; it concentrates wealth. Training models costs billions. Only five companies can afford it. When Tchir suggests rate pressure from "AI considerations," he's translating: **Wall Street needs rates lower to subsidize the next extraction cycle.** Affordability for workers? Irrelevant. What matters is whether JPMorgan's AI bets pencil out. The affordability crisis is intentional. It's the cost of letting finance bet the economy on machines.

What the Documents Show

The suppressed reality: corporations and governments are essentially pre-negotiating a social contract that accepts mass job displacement as inevitable while offering citizens subsistence rather than addressing why automation benefits must be hoarded by capital. This AI-driven economic restructuring arrives as existing affordability crises remain unresolved. Energy prices illustrate the problem starkly. Despite administration talking points about oil markets pricing in a "quick resolution" to Middle East disruptions, WTI futures show $80 crude locked in through 2027—what the market has stopped pretending is temporary. August contracts have climbed to $95.

🔎 Mainstream angle: The corporate press either ignored this story entirely or buried it in a 3-sentence brief. The framing, when it appeared at all, focused on process rather than impact.

Follow the Money

The mainstream press treats this as energy market analysis; what's missing is the connection: while corporations invest in AI to reduce labor costs, the same geopolitical and supply disruptions that create energy inflation show no signs of abating. Citizens facing both job obsolescence and persistent inflation are being offered UBI—which sounds generous until you calculate what that stipend actually buys when energy and essentials remain artificially elevated. The timing of the South Korean proposal alongside broader geopolitical instability—marked by failed diplomatic summits and deteriorating Middle East stability—suggests something darker than policy innovation. Tchir's observation that even "low expectations seemed to have set the bar too high" for trade negotiations indicates governments are retreating inward. They're preparing domestic populations for economic contraction by pre-legitimizing income transfers. This frames the problem as technological inevitability requiring compassion rather than as a choice corporations made to prioritize automation over workforce retention.

What Else We Know

What remains almost entirely absent from mainstream coverage is whether UBI schemes are designed as genuine redistribution or as a pressure valve—a way to maintain social stability while concentrating wealth among those who own the AI infrastructure. If AI generates tax revenue flowing to corporations that then gets partially recycled to displaced workers through UBI, the wealth transfer still flows upward. The affordability crisis continues unchecked because nobody's addressing why energy, housing, and essentials remain expensive beyond supply disruptions. For ordinary people, the practical implication is clear: institutions are preparing for your economic irrelevance while negotiating how cheaply they can maintain you. The question being quietly asked isn't how to ensure AI benefits broadly—it's how much monthly stipend prevents civil unrest while corporations pocket transformative productivity gains.

Primary Sources

What are they not saying? Who benefits from this story staying buried? Follow the regulatory filings, the court dockets, and the FOIA releases. The truth is in the paperwork — it always is.

Disclosure: NewsAnarchist aggregates from public records, API feeds (Federal Register, CourtListener, MuckRock, Hacker News), and independent media. AI-assisted synthesis. Always verify primary sources linked above.