As artificial intelligence moves toward “superintelligence,” OpenAI has unveiled an ambitious policy roadmap designed to navigate the massive economic shifts of the coming “intelligence age.” The $852 billion company is proposing a blend of market-driven capitalism and aggressive social safety nets to address growing anxieties regarding job displacement and wealth inequality.
Taxing Capital Over Labor
OpenAI suggests that as AI boosts corporate profits while reducing the need for human labor, the traditional tax base—which funds essential services like Social Security and Medicaid—could collapse. To counter this, the company floats a shift in the tax burden from labor to capital. This framework includes:
- Higher taxes on corporate income and AI-driven returns.
- A “robot tax”, similar to concepts previously discussed by tech leaders like Bill Gates, where automated systems contribute to the system like the workers they replace.
- A Public Wealth Fund, which would grant citizens an equity stake in AI infrastructure, distributing dividends directly to the public to ensure prosperity is shared.
Reimagining the Workweek and Benefits
One of the most striking proposals is a subsidized four-day workweek with no reduction in pay, fulfilling the long-held tech promise of better work-life balance through automation. OpenAI also advocates for “portable benefits”—accounts for healthcare and retirement that follow workers between jobs—and increased corporate responsibility for childcare. However, critics point out that if these benefits remain tied to employment, those fully displaced by AI may still find themselves vulnerable.
Infrastructure as a Public Utility
To sustain the “intelligence age,” OpenAI argues that AI should be treated as a utility. This requires massive expansion of electricity infrastructure and government-backed subsidies or tax credits to accelerate buildouts. This push for growth is paired with a call for new oversight bodies and containment plans to mitigate systemic risks, such as biological threats or autonomous systems operating beyond human control.
This framework arrives as the industry prepares for major gatherings like TechCrunch Disrupt 2026, where the intersection of policy and innovation will take center stage. By modeling its vision after “New Deal” era reforms, OpenAI is attempting to position itself as a proponent of a fair economy, even as it faces scrutiny over its transition from a nonprofit to a for-profit entity. This proposal follows a similar blueprint released by rival Anthropic, signaling a new phase of corporate-led industrial policy.







