Economic uncertainties and disappointing returns are tempering corporate AI investment enthusiasm, according to a new IBM survey of 2,000 global CEOs. While executives plan to increase AI spending by 31% over the next two years—double last year’s rate—only one in four report that their current AI initiatives have delivered expected returns. This cautious approach reflects broader economic concerns, with trade policy specifically identified as creating a “wait-and-see” environment that’s restraining technology investments.
The big picture: CEOs are increasing AI investments despite underwhelming initial results, driven primarily by competitive pressure rather than proven returns.
Why this matters: Despite disappointing initial returns, business leaders remain optimistic about AI’s future value, with 85% expecting positive returns within two years.
Behind the numbers: Gary Cohn, IBM vice chairman and former Trump administration economic advisor, attributes the investment hesitation to macroeconomic uncertainty.
What they’re saying: Cohn, who resigned from the Trump administration in 2018 over tariff disagreements, identified trade policy specifically as creating business uncertainty.
Key recommendations: Cohn advises CEOs to focus on three areas for successful AI implementation: