In a world of fast technological advancement and constant social change, one paradox persists: 1.2 billion people remain trapped in multidimensional poverty, their lives constrained by inadequate healthcare, limited education, and substandard living conditions. The depth of this global challenge is further illuminated by the 600 million people surviving on less than $2.15 per day. At the same time, nearly 2.9 billion individuals stand disconnected from the digital revolution that shapes our modern world.
Artificial intelligence emerges as a beacon of transformative potential, yet its promise comes with a critical caveat: its benefits currently flow primarily to the privileged few. This uneven distribution presents us with a pivotal moment – AI could either calcify existing inequalities or catalyze unprecedented social and economic advancement. The outcome hinges not on the technology itself but the choices and actions of those who shape it. This realization gives rise to prosocial AI – systems deliberately designed, developed, and deployed to enhance human welfare and planetary health.
While AI has been heralded as a panacea for centuries-old social challenges, the reality is more nuanced. Its true power lies not in miracle solutions but in its targeted application to specific, entrenched problems: clearing judicial backlogs that deny timely justice, correcting biased property valuations that perpetuate wealth gaps, and expanding financial access to the historically excluded. Still, the most compelling and cumbersome insight may be that AI’s success in addressing these challenges depends not on algorithms but on the ambitions and actions of the humans who harness its capabilities for social good.
4 Challenges That Predate AI And Are Magnified By It
The challenges we face today didn’t emerge with artificial intelligence – they are the inheritance of centuries of systemic inequalities, technological disparities, and policy shortcomings. While AI holds the power to either exacerbate or help resolve these historical burdens, its impact ultimately depends on our approach to its development and governance. Four fundamental threats, deeply embedded in our society long before AI’s advent, demand our attention – the ‘ABCD” framework.
Agency Decay Human beings like to delegate effort. While AI’s automation capabilities can free us from routine tasks, excessive algorithmic dependence threatens to undermine our autonomy and critical thinking abilities. As we delegate more decisions to machines – from personal choices to social interactions – we risk diminishing our capacity for independent judgment.
Bond Erosion Communities have historically united in the face of adversity, weaving strong social networks for mutual support. However, unchecked automation and digital isolation can unravel these vital connections, further fragmenting our already divided society.
Climate Change The environmental cost of technological progress is a familiar story. AI adds a new chapter to this challenge through its energy-intensive infrastructure of servers and data centers, demanding responsible management to prevent further ecological strain.
Divided Society While social and economic inequalities have long plagued our world, AI’s concentrated distribution among privileged groups threatens to deepen these existing divides. When advanced tools remain accessible to only a select few, they become powerful amplifiers of systemic disparities.
Yet within these challenges lies opportunity: AI, guided by human values and ethical frameworks that prioritize community welfare and equity, can become a powerful force for addressing these deeply rooted social issues
A Path Toward Inclusive Growth
Transforming Justice Systems
Through AI The axiom “justice delayed is justice denied” reveals a harsh reality in judicial systems worldwide. When court backlogs stretch for years, they do more than delay verdicts – erode public trust, discourage investment, and leave citizens reluctant to seek legal remedies. Yet AI offers a promising solution through platforms like Adalat AI, which serves nearly 3 million people annually in India. This system reduces bureaucratic friction by integrating speech-to-text transcription, optical character recognition, and streamlined workflow management. It helps restore faith in the justice system, encouraging civic engagement and economic investment.
Breaking Down Housing Barriers
In the complex wealth creation landscape, real estate is a fundamental pillar. However, systematic undervaluation of properties in underserved communities – particularly affecting people of color in the United States – perpetuates a cycle of economic inequality. These biased valuations restrict access to fair lending and drain resources that could vitalize communities through better schools, infrastructure, and social services. AI emerges as a powerful equalizer through initiatives like Just Value‘s “Restorative Value Model,” which identifies and corrects historical undervaluations. By combining equitable appraisals with appropriate lending products, communities gain tools to build generational wealth and break free from entrenched inequality.
Empowering Small Business Growth
Small and medium-sized enterprises, particularly in developing regions, often face exclusion from essential financial services due to complex documentation requirements, limited credit histories, and skepticism toward formal banking systems. AI is bridging this gap through innovative solutions like Lucrefy, leveraging familiar messaging platforms like WhatsApp and Telegram to provide accessible financial management tools. These technologies help entrepreneurs expand their operations, create jobs, and drive regional economic vitality by simplifying accounting processes and offering real-time business insights.
Navigating The AI Horizon
While AI’s transformative potential is substantive, its implementation demands as much awareness of the risks as accountability for outcomes. The technology’s drastic energy footprint and its power to either bridge or widen societal gaps are a reminder that innovation is not good by itself. It is a means to an end, which must be guided by wisdom. Ultimately, AI’s greatest strength lies not in autonomous operation but in its ability to enhance and amplify human capabilities through hybrid intelligence – a deliberately configured complementarity of our natural and artificial abilities.
The Path Forward: A SOCIAL Framework
Synergy: Combine human wisdom with AI capabilities to create solutions greater than the sum of their parts
Oversight: Maintain human judgment and ethical considerations in AI system design and deployment
Community: Center AI development around collective benefit rather than individual gain
Inclusion: Ensure technologies and their benefits reach all segments of society
Accountability: Build transparent frameworks for monitoring AI’s impacts and outcomes
Learning: Foster continuous exchange between human and machine intelligence to drive innovation
MIT Solve‘s initiative, having touched over 280 million lives, demonstrates how this SOCIAL approach to hybrid intelligence can catalyze meaningful change. By weaving together AI’s analytical power with humanity’s timeless virtues – curiosity, compassion, creativity, and courage – we can create solutions that serve not just technological advancement, but genuine human flourishing. The future of inclusive growth lies in this deliberate partnership between natural and artificial intelligence, working in concert to build a more equitable world.
This article relates to a panel conversation with MIT Solvers.