Calum Chace
Calum Chace is an English writer and speaker, focusing on artificial intelligence. He is the author of Surviving AI, The Economic Singularity, and the philosophical science fiction novels Pandora's Brain, and its sequel, Pandora's Oracle. He is a co-founder of Conscium, an AI safety startup.
Education
Chace studied philosophy, politics, and economics at Oxford University. His interest in AI stems from his reading of science fiction, which he describes as philosophy in fancy dress.Career
Prior to becoming a full-time writer and speaker in 2012, Chace had a 30-year career in journalism and business. He trained as a journalist with the BBC, and later he wrote for the FT. As of 2019, he was a contributor to Forbes magazine. He moved into business, and ran a media practice at KPMG's strategic and commercial intelligence group before serving as director and CEO for a number of businesses.He has published five books on artificial intelligence.
In 2017, Chace co-founded the Economic Singularity Club, "a loose group of technologists, academics and writers who think the threat of mass technological unemployment is worth taking seriously".
Talks
In July 2019, Chace was listed among the top 50 futurist speakers in the world. In 2025 he was ranked sixth in a list of the world's top futurist professionals by Global Gurus TOP30, a research organization.Economic singularity
Chace coined the term the economic singularity to mean the time when technological unemployment becomes a reality. He argues that "it is at least a serious possibility that within a generation, many or even most people will be unemployable because machines will be able to do whatever they could do for money better, cheaper and faster. We should be taking this possibility seriously and working out what we would do about it."“In the past, automation hasn’t caused lasting unemployment and has raised the level of wealth in the economy and created new jobs, but past examples of automation have replaced our muscle power and we had our cognitive abilities.” So what will happen when robots automate our cognitive work? "When they start seeing cars driving around with no one driving them, people will realise how impressive computers are. If we don't have a plan, people will panic."
“I think our best hope going forward is figuring out how to live in an economy of radical abundance, where machines do all the work, and we basically play.” “A world where machines do all the jobs could be a world where humans do more important things, like playing, learning and having fun, but paying for that is going to be tricky.”