
AI Adoption Fails to Deliver Measurable Returns as Trust and Policy Shift
A survey of 100 manufacturers found no significant revenue or cost benefits from AI, while Beijing prepares to allow limited imports of advanced Nvidia chips and consumers show deepening scepticism.
A survey of 100 manufacturing leaders in the United States found that none reported a significant revenue increase or cost savings from artificial intelligence, even though 64% claimed efficiency gains. The Grant Thornton data, published this month, also showed that 48% of manufacturers remain stuck in pilot projects, against 34% across other industries. The zero result on financial returns exposes a widening gap between operational AI activity and measurable impact on the profit-and-loss statement.
In retail, AI’s influence is highly concentrated. Euromonitor International data indicates that AI referral traffic grew more than 300% last year, yet beauty and personal care captured roughly 45% of generative-AI referrals and consumer health another 28%, while categories such as snacks and pet care remained in the low single digits. The same research found that 78% of consumers have discovered a new brand through generative AI, but only 10 to 15% of US skin-care brands appear in AI-driven recommendations at all. Visibility is binary and earned through structured product data, not guaranteed by shelf position or media spend.
Consumer trust in AI remains fragile on both sides of the Atlantic. A survey of 1,250 American adults by Insuranceopedia found that 25% have turned to AI chatbots for medical advice because they cannot afford a doctor, with the figure rising to 53% among those aged 18 to 24. A study in the British Medical Journal last October concluded that AI chatbots provide problematic medical advice about half the time. In Italy, a GoStudent survey of 500 parents and children aged 11 to 17 revealed that 49% of teenagers who use AI for personal matters discuss schoolwork—the highest share in Europe—but only 8% believe a chatbot gives more useful answers than a real person, and 52% feel less capable of completing the same task alone.
Beijing has shifted its stance in the US-China chip stand-off, informing Alibaba, ByteDance and DeepSeek that they will be allowed to purchase limited numbers of Nvidia H200 processors, according to a source cited by the South China Morning Post. The move aims to temporarily ease a training bottleneck while China maintains its long-term goal of tech self-sufficiency. Analysts in Shanghai note that as AI models become a commodity, the contest is increasingly a race over electricity costs, pitting China’s renewable-energy build-out against America’s hydrocarbon-based grid. In Singapore, investors at the Reuters NEXT Asia conference said they are directing capital toward AI infrastructure such as data centres and liquid cooling, rather than front-end models, amid concerns about over-exuberance.
The first H200 shipments to the approved Chinese firms are expected in the coming months, a regulatory step that will test whether access to cutting-edge silicon accelerates China’s AI capabilities or merely narrows a temporary computing-power gap.
| Atlantic / Anglosphere press | +0.20 | neutral |
|---|---|---|
| Chinese press | −0.20 | neutral |
| Southeast Asian press | 0.00 | neutral |
We are moving beyond the era of model supremacy; the winners will be those who master cheap power and human judgment.
By citing survey data showing zero significant returns from AI in manufacturing, and emphasizing the commoditization of models, the bloc grounds its argument in business pragmatism.
The atlantica bloc omits the geopolitical competition over energy and chips that the cinese bloc highlights, focusing instead on business-level judgment.
China must treat the AI race as a life-or-death struggle for national power; electricity and chips are the new battlefields.
By framing the AI competition as a zero-sum geopolitical contest and highlighting China's need for unconventional reforms, the bloc creates a narrative of existential urgency.
The cinese bloc omits the argument that model superiority is already eclipsed by cheap power and human judgment, and that the real contest may be at the enterprise level rather than national.
We see AI as a tool that requires human adaptation and careful investment; the hype may not translate into immediate returns.
By presenting investor skepticism and the need for digital talent development, the bloc positions itself as a cautious, pragmatic observer.
The sud_est_asiatica bloc omits the narrative of a high-stakes global competition and the rapid commoditization of AI models, instead emphasizing gradual adaptation.
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