IBM Arvind Krishna CEO says that, despite Trump’s administration attacks on the world characterWorld trade is not dead. In fact, he believes that the key to US development will embrace an international exchange of goods.
“So I am really stable loyal – I think it goes to economists who studied world trade in the 1800s – and I think their prospect was that every 10% increase in world trade leads to a 1% increase in local GDP,” Krishna told SXSW. “So if we really want to optimize even for local [growth]You must have world trade. ”
World trade is in line with allowing talent abroad to flow in the US, Krishna said. Management and its allies have requested increased restrictions student and H-1b work taskswho claim to have put us in a disadvantaged position.
“We want people to come here and bring their talent with them and apply this talent,” Krishna said. “And we want to develop our own talent, but you can’t develop it and if you don’t bring the best people from all over the world to learn our people. So we must be an international talent hub and we need to have policies that follow this.”
During the broad interview, Krishna touched not only the geopolitics but also AI, who believes it is a valuable technology-but not a panacea.
Disagreed with a Recent provision by Dario AmodeiAnthropic’s chief executive that 90% of the code can be written by AI in the next three to six months.
“I think the number will be more like 20-30% of the code could be written by AI-not 90%” Krishna said. “Are there some really simple cases of use? Yes, but there is an equally complicated number of those where it will be zero. ”
Krishna said she believes that AI would eventually make developers more productive, reinforcing the exits of their employers and not the elimination of programming work, as some critics of the AI provide.
“If you can do 30% more codes with the same number of people, will you get more codes written or less?” He said. “Because the story has shown that the most productive corporate is gaining market share, and then you can produce more products that allow you to have more market share.”
Grant, IBM has an interest in presenting AI as a non -threat. The company sells a range of AI powered products and services, including auxiliary coding tools.
Statements are also a piece of reversal for Krishna, who stated in 2023 that IBM was planning to stop hiring In back-office features that the company expected it could replace with AI Tech.
Krishna compared the AI discussions that replace employees in early discussions on calculators and photoshop that replace mathematicians and artists. He acknowledged that there are “unresolved” challenges around intellectual property in training and the results of AI, but ultimately technology is a positive – and increasing power.
“It’s a tool,” said Krishna of AI. “If the quality produces everyone gets better using these tools, then even for the consumer, you now consume better quality [products]. ”
This tool will get cheaper, Krishna predicted. While noting that the models of reasoning such as the O1 of Openai require a lot of computers and thus are energy forms, he believes that AI will use “less than 1%” of the energy it uses today thanks to emerging techniques such as those evidenced by Chinese AI Startup Deepseek.
“I think Deepseek gave us a preview that you can live with a much smaller model,” Krishna said. “Now the question is still asked, you still need some really big models to get started? And I think this is [DeepSeek] I didn’t talk. ”
But while AI will commercialize, Krishna is not convinced that he will help humanity reach new knowledge, reflecting a recent essay by Hugging Face Thomas Wolf co -founder. On the contrary, Krishna believes that quantum computing – an IBM technology has invested to a large extent, not for anything – will be the key to accelerating scientific discovery.
“AI learns from the knowledge already produced, literature, graphics, and so on,” Krishna said. “He is not trying to understand what is going to come … I am the one who does not believe that today’s AI generation will lead us to what is called artificial general intelligence … When AI can have all the knowledge to be completely reliable and answer questions beyond those responsible for Einstein or Nobel or Nobel.”
Krishna’s allegations are in contrast to those of Openai Sam Altman CEO, who argued that “surface“AI is in the area of potential in the coming years and could It massively accelerates innovation.