Marc Andreessen, the co-founder of the venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz (a16z), will help lead a new Federal Reserve task force focused on studying how artificial intelligence changes productivity and employment.
The Federal Reserve has launched four other similar initiatives and announced Andreessen’s appointment on July 9.
The Federal Reserve recently announced that Marc Andreessen, the co-founder of Andreessen Horowitz, will co-lead a panel called Productivity and Jobs alongside Charles I. Jones, a Stanford economics professor currently on leave at the AI company Anthropic, and Asha Sharma, who serves as Microsoft’s executive vice president and Xbox CEO.
The panel is one of five task forces created by Fed Chair Kevin Warsh to challenge how the central bank reaches monetary policy decisions. The other four groups will focus on the Fed’s communications, its balance sheet, the quality of economic data, and how policymakers measure inflation.
A separate task force will be headed by former Walmart CEO Doug McMillon.
The Productivity and Jobs group operates independently and leans on Fed staff for support. It will supply research and feedback to the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), which sets U.S. interest rates, but the panel itself sets no rates and holds no rulemaking power.
FOMC members are currently divided over whether AI cools inflation by lifting productivity or stokes it through heavy spending on chips, data centers, and power.
In a May 27 speech, Fed Governor Lisa Cook said she expects AI to support stronger growth but warned that it carries the risk of higher inflation. Former Fed Chair Jerome Powell also said back in March that data center construction was “probably pushing inflation up at the margin.”
While Andreessen’s appointment carries no direct crypto mandate, his company Andreessen Horowitz, known as a16z, is among the largest institutional backers of digital assets through its a16z crypto division.
Andreessen himself is one of America’s more vocal Bitcoin (BTC) supporters. Cryptopolitan reported that a16z’s crypto arm raised $2.2 billion for its fifth fund earlier this year, bringing its dedicated crypto capital to roughly $10 billion.
The Fed’s conclusions on productivity, inflation, and jobs could shape decisions about interest rates, which affect Bitcoin and other risk assets. When the Fed raises rates, money often flows toward safer assets like cash and government bonds. When rates are low, investors tend to take more risks, which can benefit Bitcoin and other volatile assets.
Andreessen’s appointment changes no regulation and puts no digital asset on the Fed’s agenda, but it places a known crypto-friendly figure inside a process that could shape how the central bank reads technological change for years.
Warsh has said the groups could start work within weeks and deliver early findings in the fall, but no final deadline has been set. The Fed said it would share more about the work over time.
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