
Martha Gimbel
Executive Director and Co-Founder of the Budget Lab at Yale, Martha Gimbel is an economist focused on federal economic policy, labor markets, and the macroeconomic effects of AI. She previously served as a senior advisor at the White House Council of Economic Advisers and held economic research roles at Indeed, Schmidt Futures, Congress’s Joint Economic Committee, and the U.S. Department of Labor.
AI Capex Boom Meets Higher Rates and Public-Market Scrutiny
Bloomberg’s Ed Ludlow framed the day’s tech selloff as a test of the AI trade’s practical limits: higher rate expectations after a solid jobs report, pressure on chip stocks after Broadcom’s outlook, and the capital demands of SpaceX’s looming IPO. Across interviews with economists, executives and investors, the program argued that enthusiasm for AI and space infrastructure remains strong, but the market is increasingly focused on whether compute, energy, supply chains and public investors can absorb the scale of spending required.
AI Has Not Yet Become a Hiring or Productivity Shock
Martha Gimbel, executive director of the Yale Budget Lab, told Bloomberg Technology that May’s jobs report showed a steady labor market and gave the Federal Reserve room to keep its focus on inflation. She argued that artificial intelligence is already visible in investment and may be adding some price pressure, but she sees no evidence yet that it is holding back hiring or producing a measurable productivity shock in the economic data.