FRANKFURT, June 24 (Reuters) – Only a small fraction of euro zone firms use artificial intelligence intensely and they tend āto be small, young, service-oriented companies, leaving plenty of āroom for diffusion, a European Central Bank blog post said on Wednesday.
The vast āmajority of firms now say they have been using AI but economists have been debating just how intense this use is and whether it can yield the sort of efficiency gains that are ārelevant on a macroeconomic ā level.
Surveying more than 5,000 companies across the bloc, the ECB found that over 70% report using AI ā and much of the rest plan to start this year. But use is moderate or infrequent and only 7% use AI intensely, the āsurvey āfound.
“The intensive use that drives transformation āand generates macroeconomic gains āremains rare,” the authors, all ECB researchers, said, in a post that does not necessarily represent the ECB’s views.
Intense use is skewed towards smaller companies with large firms clearly lagging behind, the survey results showed. Younger firms also used AI more intensely than āolder companies and use was skewed towards āhigh-tech, knowledge-intensive services.
“Firms at an early āstage of adoption often ācite cost reductions and improvements in operational efficiency āas their main reasons for using āit,” the blog āsaid. “Intensive users are more frequently motivated by growth and innovation.”
Firms tend to invest in AI when their competitors do, succumbing āto peer pressure, āand intensive users spend heavily on customised solutions that āgo well beyond just purchasing licences, the blog said.
(Reporting by āBalazs KoranyiEditing by Tomasz Janowski)
