The City of London has a nose for cognitive dissonance, and this week’s headlines from the tech sector reek of it. Jeff Bezos, the man who turned online book sales into a global retail empire, has pledged to create 100,000 new AI-related jobs across Europe. A noble gesture, on the surface. But scratch the surface, and you find the thorn: the very chips powering those AI jobs are about to get a lot more expensive. For British manufacturers, already reeling from a cost of living crisis and sticky inflation, this is not a prophecy of prosperity. It is a margin squeeze.
Let us examine the numbers. The pledge, announced via Amazon’s cloud division AWS, targets roles in machine learning, data engineering, and AI support. The jobs are welcome, certainly. But the timing is perverse. Nvidia, the dominant supplier of AI accelerators, has signalled that its next-generation chips will carry a hefty premium. Analysts estimate a 10 to 15 per cent increase in unit costs. For a UK manufacturing sector that has seen input prices rise 8 per cent year on year, this is another blow to the bottom line.
Bezos’s vision relies on cheap compute. But the chip industry is a tight oligopoly. TSMC and Samsung control the fabrication; Nvidia and AMD control the architecture. There is no room for negotiation. The price hike is a tax on the AI ambitions of every European firm. And who will pay it? The consumer, indirectly, through higher prices for goods and services. Or the shareholder, through lower returns.
British manufacturers are caught in a vice. On one side, the cost of capital has risen with interest rates. On the other, the cost of critical components is ticking up. The AI jobs pledge offers labour but ignores the capital expenditure required to make that labour productive. This is the old story of fiscal fantasy: promising growth while ignoring the input costs.
The government’s response has been predictably non-committal. The Chancellor extols the virtues of AI while the Bank of England frets about wage inflation. But the market sees the contradiction. Gilt yields have ticked up as investors price in a more expensive future. The pound has weakened against the dollar, raising the cost of dollar-denominated chip imports. It is a vicious cycle.
The bottom line is this: Bezos’s pledge is a headline, not a policy. The real story is the structural imbalance between labour costs and capital costs. Until the chip supply chain stabilises, every AI job is built on a foundation of sand. The City knows this. Watch the tech stocks. They will tell you more than any press release.








