The Iceberg Index: Measuring Skills-centered Exposure in the AI Economy
Ayush Chopra, Santanu Bhattacharya, DeAndrea Salvador, Ayan Paul, Teddy Wright, Aditi Garg, Feroz Ahmad, Alice C. Schwarze, Ramesh Raskar, Prasanna Balaprakash

TL;DR
The paper introduces the Iceberg Index, a novel skills-centered metric that quantifies AI's technical exposure across occupations, revealing widespread potential for automation beyond visible AI adoption in the economy.
Contribution
It develops a large-scale simulation model and the Iceberg Index to measure AI's skills-based exposure, capturing latent automation potential across the entire labor market.
Findings
AI exposure extends far beyond visible sectors.
Cognitive automation impacts administrative and professional services significantly.
Exposure is widespread across all states, not just tech hubs.
Abstract
Artificial Intelligence is reshaping America's $9.4 trillion labor market, with cascading effects that extend far beyond visible technology sectors. When AI transforms quality control tasks in automotive plants, consequences spread through logistics networks, supply chains, and local service economies. Yet traditional workforce metrics cannot capture these ripple effects: they measure employment outcomes after disruption occurs, not where AI capabilities overlap with human skills before adoption crystallizes. Project Iceberg addresses this gap using Large Population Models to simulate the human-AI labor market, representing 151 million workers as autonomous agents executing over 32,000 skills and interacting with thousands of AI tools. It introduces the Iceberg Index, a skills-centered metric that measures the wage value of skills AI systems can perform within each occupation. The…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDigital Economy and Work Transformation · Ethics and Social Impacts of AI · Impact of AI and Big Data on Business and Society
