AI in 2026: from performance to power and privilege

Going forward, the key question won't be what AI can do, but how we will power it and who will be granted the privilege of working alongside it

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AI in 2026: from performance to power and privilege

Artificial intelligence made huge strides in 2025. The technology moved from technical noise and experimental language models to a hard economic and geopolitical engine, reshaping international alliances alongside the evolution of major corporate structures.

For the Arab world, and particularly the nations of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), this was not simply a year of adopting new tools—it was the year in which economic diversification took clearer shape as a strategy linking artificial intelligence and energy.

That shift was driven by major developments that began with US President Donald Trump’s trip to Saudi Arabia in May, followed by Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's visit to Washington in November.

As the cyber cold war between the US and China intensified, 2025 was shaped by three core economic dynamics. The first was the replacement of the traditional oil-for-security equation with a new formula: chips and infrastructure in exchange for capital and influence, or petrodollars for technodollars (technology-backed capital). This was reflected in the lifting of restrictions on the export of Nvidia chips to Saudi Arabia and the UAE.

At the same time, major companies began decoupling revenue growth from headcount growth by deploying intelligent agents, triggering qualitative and quantitative waves of redundancy. Meanwhile, electronic chips evolved into strategic goods, subject to unprecedented sovereign-style taxes and trade restrictions, as seen in Trump’s conditional offer to China and Beijing’s rejection of it.

The ‘Gulf-Nvidia axis’

The year brought a profound restructuring of US-Gulf relations, no longer driven primarily by oil exports, but by Washington’s need for economically anchored alliances capable of mobilising capital for re-industrialisation, matched by the Gulf’s need for advanced computing power to secure its economic future.

Trump’s Gulf tour differed from previous diplomatic visits that focused on counter-terrorism or stabilising oil prices. This time, the agenda was dominated by the economics of artificial intelligence and sovereign capability, culminating in a fundamental shift in export policy. The Trump administration prioritised direct economic gains and strategic alignment over the more cautious restrictions of its predecessor, approving the export of advanced Nvidia chips to Gulf entities.

REUTERS / Brian Snyder
US President Donald Trump and Saudi Crown Prince and Prime Minister Mohammed Bin Salman exchange a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) during a ceremony at the Royal Court in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on 13 May 2025.

Read more: US, Saudi Arabia enter 'golden era' in defence, AI partnership

In Saudi Arabia, memoranda of understanding focused on the critical minerals required for artificial intelligence hardware. In the UAE, President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed announced a $1.4tn investment in the US over the next decade, spanning technology, artificial intelligence, and energy. In Qatar, major investments in US technology sectors were unveiled, reinforcing Doha’s role as a financial hub for the emerging digital economy.

The November visit of Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince to Washington gave these arrangements an institutional, political, and economic character. Supply chain resilience and regional instability formed the overarching themes.

The summit between Trump and the Crown Prince went beyond protocol to deliver concrete economic frameworks. It opened with a nuclear technology agreement, as negotiations achieved a breakthrough towards a civil nuclear cooperation deal, a step of major importance for powering energy-intensive data centres. It also included a partnership aimed at securing supply chains for uranium and rare earth elements, both critical to the semiconductor industry, with the stated goal of reducing reliance on Chinese processing.

Saudi AI company Humain during the Future Investment Initiative (FII) conference in Riyadh on 29 October 2025.

The talks also finalised agreements that allow Saudi entities, including HUMAIN, to acquire up to 35,000 Nvidia Blackwell chips, enabling the country to develop sovereign large language models. These agreements triggered a wave of purchases and positioned Humain among the leading global compute operators, supporting Vision 2030’s digital transformation ambitions.

The UAE, as a strategic partner of Microsoft, secured licences enabling G42 to import large quantities of Nvidia chips. The deal required G42 to remove Chinese equipment from its infrastructure, a concession it was prepared to make in order to strengthen its position as a global node for artificial intelligence.

The silicon war

As US-Gulf relations warmed strategically, the technology cold war between Washington and Beijing entered a new, more volatile phase in late 2025, shaped by unconventional American trade policies and Chinese defensive manoeuvres.

In December, Trump announced a policy shift regarding semiconductor exports to China, reversing the previous blanket ban on advanced chips. The administration proposed allowing Nvidia to sell its H200 chips to accredited customers in China. The H200 is powerful, but one generation behind the latest Blackwell line. The US condition was unprecedented. It required the payment of a 25% levy, or a share of revenues, to be transferred directly to the US government.

The administration argued that the blanket ban was harming American companies, including Nvidia, AMD, and Intel, by depriving them of revenue from the world’s largest semiconductor market. Those lost revenues, it said, also indirectly supported Chinese domestic innovation, including Huawei. The 25% levy was presented as a mechanism to protect national security, create American jobs, and preserve US leadership in artificial intelligence.

Beijing’s response was swift, but conducted in the style of a quiet war. While China’s foreign ministry publicly stated that cooperation would benefit both sides, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology and Chinese regulators moved to block acceptance of the offer in practice through non-tariff barriers. A new procurement rule required local companies to justify why Chinese chips could not meet their needs before they could place orders for American hardware. In effect, that bureaucratic requirement nullified the US proposal.

Nash Weerasekera

Read more: AI and the future of jobs

The rise of agentic AI

The most unsettling corporate development of 2025 was the transition from generative artificial intelligence, which creates content, to agentic artificial intelligence, which carries out actions. The shift has profound implications for organisational structure, profitability, and the labour market.

In 2024, companies used artificial intelligence to draft emails, write work-related notes, and support demanding tasks. In 2025, agentic systems, commonly described as agents, were increasingly used to manage entire workflows. Agents gained the ability to reason, plan, and execute multi-step tasks independently, such as handling a customer service claim end-to-end and issuing a refund without human involvement. By mid-year, 62% of organisations surveyed by McKinsey were experimenting with agents.

This economic harvest came with a clear and unsettling human cost. The narrative that artificial intelligence will not replace you, but someone using artificial intelligence will, began to fade as agentic systems demonstrated the ability to replace the person entirely in specific roles.

The technology and services sectors saw layoffs explicitly attributed to efficiency gains from artificial intelligence. Employees were leaving not because markets were shrinking, but because the nature of work was changing.

The technology and services sectors saw layoffs explicitly attributed to efficiency gains from artificial intelligence

The fintech company Klarna paused hiring and reduced its workforce, stating that its artificial intelligence assistants were performing the work of 700 full-time employees while maintaining comparable levels of customer satisfaction. The shift boosted profits by $40mn. Duolingo, meanwhile, terminated contractors and restructured full-time roles under an artificial intelligence-first banner, using the technology to generate content that previously required human linguists.

IBM also continued its plan to halt hiring for back office roles, including human resources and accounting, that artificial intelligence can perform, aiming to replace around 30% of these roles over five years.

The group most exposed in 2025 was not blue collar or basic labour, but middle management. Agentic systems became increasingly capable of coordinating work by assigning tasks, monitoring progress, and compiling reports. These functions have traditionally defined the role of middle management, contributing to what has been described as the hollowing out of the middle. The ratio of individual contributors to managers grew, as artificial intelligence tools enabled a single manager to oversee far greater output.

This expansion also created a new problem that can be described as a beginner crisis. Artificial intelligence agents handle routine work such as data entry, basic coding, and first-line support, while entry pathways for human employees shrink, creating the conditions for a future skills gap. 

Al Majalla

Markets and investment

In terms of corporate performance, global financial markets responded to developments in 2025, as exposure to artificial intelligence became the primary yardstick for asset valuation. Financial data showed a surge in the revenues of model developers. OpenAI, for example, reported annual revenue of $13bn by August, up from $200mn at the start of 2023. This suggests that the apparent demand for artificial intelligence is not a bubble but a structural shift in corporate spending.

Major financial institutions such as Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan embraced artificial intelligence-supported productivity and began to see clear competitive advantages. Expectations also grew that 2026 would be a strong year for mergers and acquisitions, driven by the need for traditional companies to acquire technical talent.

As we move towards 2026, the focus is shifting from artificial intelligence software to the physics of artificial intelligence. The central constraint on growth is no longer the availability of chips, but the electricity required to run them. The 2025 harvest revealed a pronounced energy shortage, and data centres are expected to consume a substantial share of available grid capacity.

At the same time, Beijing's rejection of the silicon tax offers a glimpse of what 2026 may bring. It is likely to see the hardening of two distinct global technology stacks. Firstly, the Western and global stack, built on Nvidia, AMD, and Intel, is centred in the US, Europe, and allied countries. Secondly, the Chinese stack, built on Huawei and SMIC, operates on domestic clouds, serving China and potentially parts of the Global South.

AFP
A man tests a Huawei smartphone at the Mobile World Congress (MWC) in Shanghai on June 28, 2023.

This split will force multinational companies to run dual information technology systems, increasing complexity and cost.

The artificial intelligence harvest of 2025 was abundant for those who controlled infrastructure, meaning chips and energy, and for those with the boldness to restructure their business models with discipline. The year validated ambitious diversification strategies and deeper entry into the global artificial intelligence supply chain, not only as consumers, but as vital nodes for finance and energy.

Even so, the outlook for 2026 suggests the easy gains are over. Political friction with China will impose difficult choices tied to technological neutrality in the silicon war. The social contract will also be tested as efficiency gains from agentic artificial intelligence begin to erode traditional middle-class employment structures. The defining question for 2026 will not be what artificial intelligence can do, but how we will power it and who will be granted the privilege of working alongside it.

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