A logistics manager in Dubai reroutes a fleet hours before a port disruption becomes news. A policymaker in Riyadh watches the employment effects of a subsidy reform appear in weeks, not years. A graduate in Astana is matched to a career that did not exist when she enrolled. Three lives, one shift: the machinery of governing is learning to see in real time.
This is the territory of AI Economics, not a technology agenda bolted onto an economics ministry, but the fusion of data, technology and policy into a living system. It changes what a government can know, how fast it can act, and how honestly it can measure whether anything worked.