Intense AI use still rare among euro zone firms, ECB researchers find


FILE PHOTO: AI (Artificial Intelligence) letters and robot hand miniature in this illustration taken, June 23, 2023. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

FRANKFURT, June 24 (Reuters) - Only ⁠a small fraction of euro zone firms use artificial intelligence ⁠intensely and they tend to be small, young, service-oriented ‌companies, leaving plenty of room for diffusion, a European Central Bank blog post said on Wednesday.

The vast majority 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 relevant ‌on a macroeconomic level.

Surveying more than 5,000 companies across the bloc, the ECB found that over 70% report ⁠using AI and much of the rest plan ​to start this ‌year. But use is moderate or infrequent and only 7% ⁠use AI intensely, ​the survey found.

"The intensive use that drives transformation and generates macroeconomic gains remains 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 older companies and use was skewed towards high-tech, knowledge-intensive services.

"Firms at an early stage of adoption often cite cost reductions and improvements in operational efficiency as their main reasons for using ​it," the blog said. "Intensive users are more ⁠frequently motivated by growth and innovation."

Firms tend to invest in AI ​when their competitors do, succumbing to peer ‌pressure, and intensive users spend heavily ​on customised solutions that go well beyond just purchasing licences, the blog said.

(Reporting by Balazs KoranyiEditing by Tomasz Janowski)

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