More Than a Market Story
The AI bubble cannot be understood through stock prices alone. This is a wicked problem where economics, geopolitics, military competition, and information warfare are deeply intertwined, creating feedback loops that make simple predictions impossible.
In late 2025, AI enterprises account for 80% of American stock market gains. Tech companies will spend $400 billion on AI infrastructure this year. The IMF warns of global impacts if valuations correct sharply. Yet governments frame AI as essential to national security, creating incentives to continue spending regardless of commercial viability.
Why This Matters
A market correction could affect military AI programs. Geopolitical competition drives spending regardless of ROI. Misinformation distorts investment and policy decisions. These aren't separate issues but facets of the same complex problem.
The Wicked Problem
A "wicked problem" involves multiple stakeholders with conflicting values, incomplete information, and interconnected causes. The AI bubble exhibits all these characteristics.
Four Interconnected Dimensions
Economic
Investment flows, valuations, circular financing
Geopolitical
US-China competition, supply chains
Information
Misinformation, algorithmic curation
Military
Autonomous systems, deterrence
Venture capitalists, Pentagon strategists, social media platforms, and governments all have different reasons to inflate or deflate AI capability claims, shaped by fundamentally different reward structures.
Economic Dimension
Tech companies are collectively funding the equivalent of a new Apollo program every ten months - more than any firms have ever spent on a single technological buildout.
Significant AI revenue comes from hyperscalers buying from each other. Microsoft invests in OpenAI, which pays Microsoft for cloud services. This circular flow makes identifying genuine demand difficult. Goldman Sachs suggests AI spending is reaching productivity limits.
- Goldman Sachs Research, 2025
Geopolitical Dimension
AI development is inseparable from US-China competition. Both view AI leadership as essential to prosperity and security, creating investment incentives regardless of commercial returns.
The US has implemented restrictive export controls on advanced semiconductors. China accelerated domestic chip development in response. The supply chain is remarkably concentrated: TSMC makes 90% of advanced chips, NVIDIA dominates AI accelerators, ASML is the sole supplier of critical lithography machines.
Critical Minerals
AI hardware depends on rare earths concentrated in limited areas. China processes 60-90% of many critical minerals. Australia's rare earth deposits represent both opportunity and strategic resource.
China's DeepSeek demonstrated meaningful capabilities despite export restrictions, potentially at lower costs than western estimates, complicating narratives that controls would decisively slow Chinese development.
Information Ecosystem
Generative AI and engagement algorithms produce and amplify disinformation, challenging democratic processes and eroding public trust.
Publishers
AI lowers the cost of producing false content dramatically.
People
Individuals cannot distinguish AI content from authentic material.
Platforms
Engagement algorithms promote sensational content including misinfo.
Detection
AI detection tools deliver mixed results; AI cannot fact-check itself.
Erosion of Shared Reality
As AI content proliferates, people lose ability to trust any source, undermining political discourse, economic decisions, and social cohesion.
Military Dimension
AI transforms military capabilities potentially as significantly as nuclear weapons. Integration into strategic decision-making raises risks of miscalculation, escalation, and unintended conflict.
Both the US and China deploy AI across domains: autonomous UAVs, intelligence analysis, and decision support systems. As nations approach AGI, competition intensifies.
Catastrophic Scenario
A major AI model going rogue could damage financial markets or security systems, potentially requiring an international moratorium with severe implications.
The Pentagon released AI guidelines in 2021 and updated weapons autonomy policy in 2023. Over 50 countries joined a military AI declaration. Yet these norms remain voluntary.
Interconnections
What makes this a wicked problem is how each dimension reinforces the others. Economic pressures shape geopolitics. Military competition justifies spending. Information warfare distorts understanding.
Incentives to Inflate AI Capabilities
The Feedback Loop
Inflated valuations justify government spending, reinforcing AI importance narratives, attracting more investment. Breaking this requires understanding all dimensions.
NT Implications
Investment decisions: NT organisations should recognise vendor claims may be bubble-influenced. The 2024 Government Copilot trial found productivity gains more modest than marketed.
Workforce impacts: AI efficiencies could disproportionately affect administrative staff, with women comprising 75% of potentially affected APS roles.
Information integrity: NT communities, including remote populations, may be particularly vulnerable to misinformation. Media literacy is essential.
Indigenous Data Sovereignty
AI systems trained on global datasets may not handle cultural data appropriately. NT organisations must ensure AI respects ICIP frameworks.
Strategic resources: The NT's critical minerals connect to AI supply chain competition. Australia's rare earth agreements create both opportunities and geopolitical exposure.