Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei published a proposal on Thursday, calling for AI companies to be taxed in order to fund programs for workers whose jobs are eliminated by artificial intelligence. Amodei framed the policy as essential to ensuring the economic gains from AI are distributed beyond the technology sector.
According to a report, Amodei wrote that incentivizing growth will not be the hard part of the AI transition. "The key challenge in such a world won't be incentivizing growth, but finding a way for everyone to share in the benefits," he stated in the piece.
What Amodei Proposed
The op-ed did not specify a tax rate or collection mechanism. Amodei's argument rested on the scale of anticipated job displacement. He suggested that AI-driven automation would eliminate roles at a pace and breadth that existing retraining programs are not designed to absorb.
His proposal would apply to AI companies broadly, including Anthropic. That self-inclusive framing is notable given the company's commercial trajectory. Anthropic has raised billions in capital and is developing some of the most capable frontier models available.
Also Read: Claude Fable 5 May Be Silently Sabotaging Your AI Work
Amodei did not describe a legislative path or name a regulatory body that would administer the fund. The proposal reads as a policy position paper rather than a blueprint for immediate action.
The op-ed appears weeks after Anthropic released a new AI safety framework calling for mandatory testing of the most powerful models and independent audits. That framework focused on technical risk rather than economic disruption.
Background
Anthropic has become one of the more vocal large AI labs on policy matters in 2026. The company released Claude Fable 5 on June 9 and has expanded its enterprise partnerships with major cloud providers. Its public posture on AI risk combines safety-focused messaging with active commercial growth.
Also Read: Wharton Professor Tries Anthropic's Mythos AI, Calls It A Real Leap
The jobs displacement argument is not new to Amodei. He has raised concerns about AI's labor market effects in prior public appearances. This op-ed represents the clearest policy prescription he has attached to those concerns.
The Trump administration issued an AI cybersecurity executive order and NSPM-11 within the last ten days, setting federal priorities that center on security and innovation rather than labor redistribution. Amodei's proposal sits in direct contrast with that framing, prioritizing distributional equity over growth incentives.
Read Next: GPT-5.6 Could Arrive This Month As OpenAI Preps For Wall Street





