Which Economic Tasks are Performed with AI? Evidence from Millions of Claude Conversations
Despite widespread speculation about artificial intelligence's impact on the future of work, we lack systematic empirical evidence about how these systems are actually being used for different tasks. Here, we present a novel framework for measuring AI usage patterns across the economy. We leverage a recent privacy-preserving system to analyze over four millionthis http URLconversations through the lens of tasks and occupations in the U.S. Department of Labor's O*NET Database. Our analysis reveals that AI usage primarily concentrates in software development and writing tasks, which together account for nearly half of all total usage. However, usage of AI extends more broadly across the economy, with approximately 36% of occupations using AI for at least a quarter of their associated tasks. We also analyze how AI is being used for tasks, finding 57% of usage suggests augmentation of human capabilities (e.g., learning or iterating on an output) while 43% suggests automation (e.g., fulfilling a request with minimal human involvement). While our data and methods face important limitations and only paint a picture of AI usage on a single platform, they provide an automated, granular approach for tracking AI's evolving role in the economy and identifying leading indicators of future impact as these technologies continue to advance.
View on arXiv@article{handa2025_2503.04761, title={ Which Economic Tasks are Performed with AI? Evidence from Millions of Claude Conversations }, author={ Kunal Handa and Alex Tamkin and Miles McCain and Saffron Huang and Esin Durmus and Sarah Heck and Jared Mueller and Jerry Hong and Stuart Ritchie and Tim Belonax and Kevin K. Troy and Dario Amodei and Jared Kaplan and Jack Clark and Deep Ganguli }, journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2503.04761}, year={ 2025 } }