- BCG's AI Maturity Matrix Assesses the AI Maturity and
Resilience of 73 Global Economies
- Out of the 73 Economies Assessed, Only Five—Canada, Mainland
China, Singapore, UK, and US—Are
Categorized as AI Pioneers
- Economies with a High Share of Sectors That Are Most Exposed
to AI— Such as Luxembourg, Hong
Kong, and Singapore—Are Among the World's Most
Vulnerable to AI Disruption
- Most Economies in the Study Score Low in R&D and
Investment
- The US and Singapore Stand Out with Robust AI Talent Pools,
While Mainland China Leads the R&D Race
BOSTON, Nov. 20,
2024 /PRNewswire/ -- AI is already transforming
industries and starting to reshape economies and is poised to
profoundly shape the future of economic development over the next
few years. The expansive scale of this growth makes AI an economic
priority in every region around the globe. However, new Boston
Consulting Group (BCG) research has established that most
economies are underprepared for AI-driven disruption. The study,
released today, shows that over 70% of the economies studied score
below average in critical areas such as ecosystem participation,
skills, and research and development.
BCG's AI Maturity Matrix offers a comprehensive overview of
the AI landscape across 73 economies by focusing on two pivotal
aspects. First, it assesses each economy's vulnerability to
AI-driven shifts, such as job displacement and industrywide
productivity gains. Second, it evaluates the preparedness of each
economy to navigate the risks associated with AI, while leveraging
its potential to stimulate economic growth.
The report then offers recommendations tailored to the different
groups to guide policymakers, and provides an interactive dashboard
for a more detailed exploration of the analysis.
"This first-of-its-kind study offers a broad view of global
adoption, revealing that while most economies are gradually
embracing AI, a small influential group of pioneers is emerging as
global leaders," said Christian
Schwaerzler, a BCG managing director, partner, chair of
BCG's Center for Public Economics, and coauthor of the report.
"This handful of leading markets stand to gain significant economic
advantages and are uniquely positioned to shape how humanity will
engage with this transformative technology."
Six Sectors Are Most Exposed to AI-Driven Changes
According to the report, there are six sectors that are most
exposed to AI-driven change: information and communication,
high-tech goods, retail, financial services, public services, and
motor vehicle manufacturing. Economies with a high share of sectors
that are most exposed to AI are among the world's most exposed to
disruption. These include Luxembourg (with financial services making up
almost 30% of GDP), Hong Kong (22%
financial services and 22% business services), and Singapore (18% business services, 16% retail,
14% financial services).
Economies with industry sectors that are less susceptible to AI
disruption are less exposed. Such sectors include construction,
agriculture, and furniture manufacturing; countries include
Indonesia (13% agriculture and 11%
construction of GDP), India (17%
agriculture and 8% construction), and Ethiopia (36% agriculture).
Measuring AI Readiness Using the ASPIRE Index
"Readiness" for AI refers to an economy's ability to effectively
implement and integrate AI. The study measures readiness across the
six dimensions that make up BCG's ASPIRE index: Ambition, Skills,
Policy and regulation, Investment, Research and innovation, and
Ecosystem.
Of the 73 economies assessed, only five—categorized as AI
pioneers—have achieved a high level of readiness. Pioneers are also
out in front in skills, R&D (research and development),
ecosystems, and investments. In skills, the US and Singapore stand out with robust AI talent
pools, crucial for driving innovation. The US leads in investing,
driven by its sophisticated capital markets and the abundance of AI
unicorns. In the R&D race, Mainland China is leading in patents
and AI academic papers.
Six Distinct Archetypes of AI Adoption
The combined analysis of AI exposure and readiness reveals six
distinct adoption groups:
- AI Pioneers: These are the vanguards of AI
adoption, building on strong infrastructure and engaging the
technology in diverse sectors. All pioneers invest liberally in
R&D and job sectors, and education systems are full of highly
skilled talent. AI will make up progressively larger shares of the
pioneers' GDPs over the next several years, as these actors supply
more and more AI technologies, services, skills, and investment to
the world.
- Steady Contenders: These economies have higher
shares of highly exposed service sectors, however their exposure is
balanced by high readiness. This group is mainly dominated by
high-income European economies like Germany, which has high exposure due to its
large information and communication technology (ICT) and advanced
manufacturing sectors. Malaysia
stands out as a non-European leader, with its government's strong
focus on AI through the National AI Roadmap, tech hubs, and
university training. This illustrates how public sector leadership
can drive tech maturity and competitiveness in emerging
economies.
- Rising Contenders: These are mainly economies with
lower AI exposure due to a relatively higher share of industrial
and/or resource-based mix of sectors. This lower level of exposure
is the main difference between rising contenders and steady
contenders, but governments in this subgroup push for AI adoption
with the same commitment as steady contenders. India, Saudi
Arabia, and Indonesia are
notable examples in this group.
- Gradual Practitioners: These are typically upper
middle- and lower middle-income countries that are adopting AI at a
moderate pace. Their economies include low-tech sectors such as
tourism, textiles, wood manufacturing, and agriculture, where
adopting AI is not yet imperative for companies.
- Exposed Practitioners. This group includes
developing and developed economies vulnerable to AI disruption due
to more high-exposure sectors and low readiness. Actors here will
need to accelerate AI adoption and mitigate potential risks. While
these countries may currently have a gap between their AI exposure
and readiness, they are well positioned to gain ground quickly with
investments in infrastructure and education. Notable economies in
this group include Malta,
Cyprus, Bahrain, Kuwait, Greece, and Bulgaria.
- AI Emergents: These economies are at the early
stages of AI adoption. They need to build foundational strategies
and infrastructure to reach the basic levels of AI integration and
competitiveness. These countries lack a national AI strategy or
similar holistic approaches to AI. Skilled workers and investment
are often scarce, as is activity related to research papers,
patents, and startups.
Positioning Governments for Success in the AI-Driven
Future
The report proposes a set of initiatives for each archetype
across three themes:
- Enabling AI: establishing the foundational elements
for AI emergents
- Accelerating AI: customizing the ASPIRE levers for
AI contenders and AI practitioners
- Amplifying AI: driving the global AI agenda for AI
pioneers
These recommendations offer an economywide approach to AI
readiness that economic managers can apply to drive sectoral
transformation.
"Policymakers need to act decisively to prepare for an AI-driven
world by enhancing resilience, productivity, job creation,
modernization, and competitiveness," said Aparna Bharadwaj, a BCG managing director,
partner, global leader for the firm's Global Advantage practice,
and coauthor of the report. "Our research provides a practical
framework to guide them through the rapidly evolving AI landscape,
empowering economies to leverage AI's transformative potential for
sustainable growth and societal wellbeing."
Download the publication here:
https://www.bcg.com/publications/2024/which-economies-are-ready-for-ai
Access the interactive dashboard here to easily view AI
engagement and explore factors like sector deployment, exposure,
investment, regulation, and readiness for disruption across the
economies studied.
Media Contact:
Eric
Gregoire
+1 617 850 3783
gregoire.eric@bcg.com
About Boston Consulting Group
Boston Consulting Group partners with leaders in business and
society to tackle their most important challenges and capture their
greatest opportunities. BCG was the pioneer in business strategy
when it was founded in 1963. Today, we work closely with clients to
embrace a transformational approach aimed at benefiting all
stakeholders—empowering organizations to grow, build sustainable
competitive advantage, and drive positive societal impact.
Our diverse, global teams bring deep industry and functional
expertise and a range of perspectives that question the status quo
and spark change. BCG delivers solutions through leading-edge
management consulting, technology and design, and corporate and
digital ventures. We work in a uniquely collaborative model across
the firm and throughout all levels of the client organization,
fueled by the goal of helping our clients thrive and enabling them
to make the world a better place.
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SOURCE Boston Consulting Group (BCG)