Bosses Splurging on AI Agents: A Costly Gamble Over Human Workers
"The compute bills are drowning our budgets—and human salaries look like a bargain now."
In a twist that’s left CFOs reeling, companies racing to replace human workers with AI agents are discovering a harsh truth: the cost of running these digital laborers often dwarfs what they’d pay actual employees. As firms lean harder on AI to churn out code, automate tasks, and “boost productivity,” the hidden price tag of compute resources—and the reckless token-spending habits of tech workers—are blowing up budgets.
“For my team, the cost of compute is far beyond the costs of the employees,” Bryan Catanzaro, NVIDIA’s VP of applied deep learning, told Axios, encapsulating a growing panic in boardrooms.
The Token Trap: When AI Becomes a Cash-Burning Monster
AI agents excel at cranking out repetitive or complex tasks—like generating reams of code—at speeds no human can match. But here’s the catch: each AI request devours tokens, virtual currency that translates to real-world dollars. Engineers now routinely run multiple AI agents in parallel, unsupervised, letting them devour tokens like a teenager bingeing streaming shows.
The result? Skyrocketing bills.
- Some tech workers have turned “tokenmaxxing”—a grotesque new slang for maxing out daily token allowances—into a competitive sport, with power users racking up monthly costs exceeding $150,000.
- A Stockholm-based engineer, Max Linder, admitted to the New York Times: “I probably spend more than my salary on Claude.”
- Uber engineers blew through the company’s entire 2026 AI budget in months using Anthropic’s Claude Code, per The Information.
Even AI-first companies aren’t immune. Anthropic’s head of Claude Code, Boris Cherny, boasted earlier this year that “pretty much 100%” of their code is AI-generated. Google and Microsoft claim a quarter of their code is now AI-written. Meanwhile, Meta ties employee performance reviews to AI usage, proving the pressure to adopt these tools comes straight from the top.
Tech Leaders’ Desperate Fixes: From Bribes to Price Hikes
In March, NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang floated a wild idea: give engineers AI tokens worth half their base salary as a recruitment perk. “Why offer a signing bonus when you can promise unlimited AI access?” he joked—or maybe not.
AI providers, meanwhile, are rubbing their hands. OpenAI investors privately gloat that their Codex tool uses tokens more efficiently than rivals like Claude Code, while Anthropic has cashed in by jacking up prices. “It’s a gold rush,” one investor told Axios.
The Bigger Question: Is AI Automation Even Worth It?
Token costs are just the tip of the iceberg. Studies suggest forcing workers to use AI tools can reduce productivity, while high-profile meltdowns at Meta and Amazon—where error-prone AIs wreaked havoc—raise doubts about their reliability.
As one CFO put it: “We replaced 100 coders with AI to save money. Now we’re paying for a army of cloud servers and still need humans to fix the AI’s mistakes.”
The Verdict?
The AI revolution isn’t just coming for jobs—it’s coming for budgets. And for now, the humans keeping the lights on might be the cheaper option after all.
Punchline:
“AI won’t steal your job—but your boss’s credit card might.”
