SF's AI Boom Reels in Billions, Reshapes Jobs and Budgets

San Francisco’s chief economist Ted Egan says the current AI boom is unlike prior tech booms: it has drawn about 60% of US AI venture capital to SF—roughly $190 billion across 2,500 startups—while office space demand wanes (about 7.5 million square feet vacated) and tech payroll share drops from 44% to 11%. Over 30,000 tech jobs have been lost in three years, yet startups and AI funding give the city long‑term optimism. The city faces a $643 million two‑year deficit, with the mayor’s plan to cut $400 million and 127 layoffs; officials warn that budget fixes may require changes to services. While AI could boost efficiency, its tendency to hallucinate complicates government use, and recovery will hinge on population growth, transit funding, and deliberate AI deployment in city operations.
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