The Quiet Collapse: How Generative AI Hollows Out Creative Markets

There is a particular kind of professional disappearance that does not show up in the unemployment figures. The illustrator still has a desk. The translator still has a website. The session musician still owns a violin. None of them have been fired. None of them have been informed, in any official capacity, that their occupation is being phased out. Their names remain on the same freelance registers, the same union rolls, the same tax filings as last year. And yet, quietly, almost imperceptibly at first, the floor underneath their work has begun to give way.
This is the strangest economic story of the decade, and it is unfolding without a moment of high drama. There are no factory closures, no mass layoffs, no town-square photographs of redundant workers carrying cardboard boxes. Instead, there is a slow, grinding compression of the rates a cover illustrator can charge for a magazine commission, a slight but stubborn drop in the volume of subtitling work coming through the agency in São Paulo, a pause in the email chain from the German publisher who used to commission a translator in Lagos every six months. Each individual moment is deniable. Taken together, they describe a structural rearrangement of the creative economy that the existing policy vocabulary, fixated on automation and job displacement, is not equipped to name.
UNESCO's flagship report on creativity and digital transformation, published on 18 February 2026 as the fourth edition of its Re|Shaping Policies for Creativity series, attempted to put a number on the rearrangement. Drawing on data from more than 120 countries, the report projected that creators worldwide are on course to lose up to 24 per cent of their revenues by 2028 as a direct consequence of generative AI, with music creators bearing the heaviest exposure and audiovisual creators close behind. An accompanying analysis published the same week by Inter Press Service amplified the geographical dimension of the problem, observing that the income losses are falling most heavily on freelance and self-employed creators in the global south, layering a new digital injury on top of long-standing inequalities in the cultural economy.
The numbers are striking, but they are not the most interesting part of the story. The most interesting part is the mechanism. This is not, in the conventional sense, a tale of automation. The translator working from Yoruba to Spanish has not been replaced by a translation engine in any specific role. She is still the translator on her own letterhead. What has happened is that the demand curve she used to live on has been displaced, almost overnight, by something that produces an approximate substitute for her output at near-zero marginal cost. The publishers, the production companies, the marketing agencies who used to commission her have not declared that they are switching to machines. They have simply stopped commissioning at the same volume, or they have begun negotiating from a position that assumes her labour competes with a free alternative. There is no transition point. There is no redundancy notice. There is no clean moment at which the policy concept of retraining becomes applicable, because the person is still doing the job. It is the job, as a paid activity, that is being hollowed out.
This distinction matters, and not only as semantics. The entire architecture of late twentieth-century labour policy, from unemployment insurance to active labour market programmes, was built on the assumption that economic dislocation comes with a clear event horizon. Someone is hired. Someone is laid off. Someone is retrained. Someone is rehired. Generative AI breaks the model not by accelerating the cycle but by detaching the harm from any of these events. The freelance writer is never laid off because she was never on a payroll. The illustrator does not get a redundancy package because there was no employer. The market she sold into has simply contracted, and the policy instruments designed to catch falling workers were not built to catch a falling market.
If the diagnosis is right, then the question that follows is the one the UNESCO report, the IPS News analysis, and a fast-growing literature on AI and the creative economy have all begun to circle. What policy instruments, beyond copyright reform, can address the harm? And who, in any meaningful sense, is responsible for the structural losses already under way?
The market, not the job, is the unit of analysis
To understand why this matters, it helps to look at what the existing debate is mostly about. Almost every legal and political fight currently being waged on behalf of creative workers concerns the upstream side of the AI value chain: whether AI labs should be allowed to train models on copyrighted works without permission, whether they should pay licensing fees for ingesting them, whether opt-out registers should be opt-in, whether the European Union's text-and-data-mining exception should narrow or expand. These are real and important fights. The Copyright Licensing Agency in the United Kingdom announced its Generative AI Training Licence to allow collective compensation for ingestion. The US Copyright Office has explored extended collective licensing on the Danish model. The Court of Justice of the European Union held its first hearing on generative AI and copyright in March 2026 in Like Company v Google, a case that may reshape the press publishers' right across the bloc.
Yet copyright, in any of its forms, only addresses one half of the harm UNESCO identified. The CISAC global economic study published in late 2024, conducted by the consultancy PMP Strategy on behalf of the international confederation of authors' societies, was unusually clear about this. The losses creators face split into two distinct streams. The first stream is the value of their existing works being scraped into training data without consent or remuneration. Copyright reform, however imperfectly, is built to address that. The second stream is the substitution effect: AI-generated outputs competing in the market against human-made works, depressing rates and shrinking commissions. Copyright, as currently understood, has very little to say about that second stream. Even a perfectly negotiated training licence does not change the fact that, once the model is trained, the marginal cost of producing a passable cover illustration falls towards zero, and the rate the illustrator can charge falls with it.
This is the harder problem, and it is the one to which the policy debate is only beginning to turn. The question is no longer simply how to compensate creators for the use of their work in training. It is how to sustain a market for human creative labour at all, when the marginal product of that labour can be approximated, however crudely, by a system that does not pay rent, sleep, or eat.
A taxonomy of instruments beyond copyright
The good news, if it can be called that, is that the policy toolkit available to address market collapse is broader than the copyright debate sometimes suggests. The bad news is that almost every instrument involves redistributing money from somebody who currently does not pay to somebody who currently does not receive, and the political economy of that redistribution is brutal.
AI cultural levies
The most direct proposal, and the one that has gained the most traction in European policy circles over the past year, is a levy on AI systems pegged to their commercial use of human cultural output. Arthur Mensch, the chief executive of the French AI lab Mistral, surprised many observers in 2025 when he publicly endorsed a revenue-based levy of roughly 1 to 1.5 per cent on commercial providers placing AI models on the European market, with funds channelled into a central pot to support cultural creation. The Mistral proposal is hardly altruistic; it would also, conveniently, harden a continental moat against American and Chinese model providers. But its underlying logic is sound, and it draws on a legal heritage that goes back six decades.
The German Copyright Act of 1965 introduced the first private copying levy, attaching a small charge to the cost of devices and media that allowed users to duplicate protected works. The principle was that where copying is structurally uncontrollable, levy-funded compensation, distributed by collective management organisations, is a more workable alternative than litigation. Generative AI presents an almost perfect analogue. The training and inference of a foundation model, at any meaningful scale, is structurally beyond the reach of one-by-one licensing. A statutory levy on commercial AI services, collected by reformed collective management organisations and distributed to creators on a metered basis, would close the substitution-side gap that copyright cannot reach. It would also avoid the worst pathology of contemporary copyright reform, which is that platforms can outspend rights holders in any line-by-line negotiation.
There are real objections. A levy must be set high enough to matter and low enough not to suppress useful applications. It must be administered by institutions trusted by both creators and developers, which is not how the existing collective management landscape is universally regarded. And it must avoid becoming a moat for incumbents who can absorb a 1.5 per cent levy more easily than a research lab in Nairobi or a co-operative model in Buenos Aires. None of these objections is fatal. All of them require institutional design rather than policy retreat.
Statutory remuneration rights
A close cousin of the levy approach is the statutory remuneration right, which decouples permission from payment. Under such a regime, AI developers might be permitted to train on lawfully accessible works without negotiating individual licences, but they would owe a non-waivable payment to authors through a collective body. The European Parliament's commissioned study on generative AI and copyright, published in 2025, examined this possibility in detail. Springer Nature's International Review of Intellectual Property and Competition Law has run a series of analyses, by scholars including Christophe Geiger, arguing that a statutory remuneration right grounded in fundamental rights to participate in cultural life could be the most workable foundation for a new compact.
The advantage of a statutory remuneration right over a pure levy is that it sits more comfortably within the existing copyright framework. The disadvantage is that it still ties payment to the use of identifiable works, which means it primarily addresses the ingestion side rather than the substitution side. Combined with a levy, however, it begins to look like a serviceable architecture.
Public commissioning and the Irish experiment
While the levy debate continues, a quieter experiment has been running in Ireland since 2022. The Basic Income for the Arts scheme, originally a three-year pilot, paid 2,000 randomly selected artists 325 euros a week, regardless of output. The Irish Department of Culture, Communications and Sport opened applications for the 2026 to 2029 successor scheme in April 2026, and a published cost-benefit analysis found that for every euro invested, society received a return of 1.39 euros, a number that has been disputed in the Irish press but has not been seriously dislodged.
The Irish scheme is not a response to AI. It was designed to address the chronic under-monetisation of cultural work in a digital economy that had already eroded the freelance commercial base before generative models arrived. But its logic transfers cleanly. If the market for creative output is being structurally compressed by a technology whose externalities are not internalised, then a state instrument that decouples income from market success becomes more, not less, defensible. A universal creative income, scaled to the working population of practising artists in any given country, would stand to working creatives roughly as agricultural support payments stand to small farmers facing global commodity competition. It is unromantic, slightly bureaucratic, and precisely the kind of thing that has historically allowed cultural production to survive market shocks.
The political objection is that it looks like a cultural welfare state. The substantive objection is that, depending on how it is administered, it can entrench the credentialing power of arts councils and reproduce existing gatekeeping. Both are genuine. Neither is decisive against an instrument that, in Ireland at least, has empirical results to its name.
Public procurement as creative-economy policy
A surprisingly underused lever is the purchasing power of governments themselves. Public sector bodies are, in aggregate, among the largest commissioners of design, illustration, translation, audiovisual production, and music in most economies. The US General Services Administration's draft AI procurement clause, the December 2025 OMB memorandum M-26-04, the United Kingdom's Procurement Policy Note 017 from February 2025, and California's executive order on AI vendor certification signed by Governor Gavin Newsom in April 2026 all introduce disclosure obligations for AI-generated content within government contracts. None of them, however, goes the further step of creating a procurement preference for human creative work in cultural production funded by public money.
A modest reform would be to require, for example, that any public broadcaster, national museum, ministry of culture, or city government commissioning creative output beyond a defined threshold use human creators where reasonably possible, with transparent disclosure when generative tools are used. This costs the state more, in the short term, than letting procurement officers chase the cheapest bid. It also creates a stable demand floor for working creatives and signals, with the kind of clarity that markets respond to, that public money will not be deployed to accelerate the collapse of the freelance creative class. India's labelling thresholds for AI-generated visual and audio content, and the EU AI Act's transparency requirements, are early sketches of the disclosure architecture this would require.
Collective bargaining as economic infrastructure
The 2023 agreements between the Writers Guild of America, the Screen Actors Guild and the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers are, for all their imperfections, the most concrete demonstration that collective bargaining can produce workable rules around AI in creative work. The WGA contract specifies that AI-generated material cannot be considered literary material for credit purposes and gives writers the right to refuse to use AI tools, while preserving their ability to challenge the use of writers' work to train AI. The SAG-AFTRA contract distinguishes digital replicas of identifiable performers from synthetic performers built from no individual likeness, and creates compensation and consent obligations around both.
These provisions are not perfect. The 2024 SAG-AFTRA video game performer strike, which ran for many months over precisely these AI consent and compensation issues in the interactive sector, demonstrated how quickly a contract negotiated for one segment of the industry begins to look incomplete when applied to another. But the agreements demonstrate the principle that collective bargaining can do work that copyright cannot, by setting industry-wide floors on consent, attribution, and compensation that apply regardless of the specific upstream provenance of any given AI output.
The implication for creative workers outside the unionised entertainment sector is uncomfortable but unavoidable. The freelance illustrator, the literary translator, the independent musician, the documentary editor often have no equivalent collective body. Building one, on a national or transnational basis, becomes infrastructure rather than ideology. The European Federation of Journalists, the European Writers' Council, the International Federation of Translators, and the Concerts Promoters Association are all operating in this space, as are emerging co-operative models among illustrators in continental Europe. Any serious policy response to the structural compression of creative labour markets needs to take seriously the question of how to fund and support these bodies.
Sovereign wealth approaches and creative commons funds
A more radical proposal, occasionally floated in policy circles and yet to find a serious political champion, is the sovereign wealth approach. The argument runs that the corpus of human cultural output ingested by foundation models is a non-rival public resource analogous to a national fishery or a hydrocarbon basin. Where states extract rents from companies exploiting natural resources, the rents fund either current public expenditure or, in the Norwegian case, an intergenerational sovereign wealth fund. By analogy, a national or supranational creative commons fund, capitalised by an ingestion-based levy on commercial AI training and operation, could be invested to provide perpetual support for cultural production.
The sovereign wealth analogy is imperfect. Cultural output is not extracted from a finite reservoir; it is generated, continuously, by living people whose labour the fund is meant to compensate. But the analogy is useful precisely because it forces a recognition that the value flowing into AI labs from human cultural output is, in macroeconomic terms, an unpriced externality of historic scale. The OECD's 2025 report on intellectual property and AI training data raised, without endorsing, the question of whether the absence of pricing on this externality represents a market failure that justifies non-market correction. That is exactly the conceptual frame a sovereign wealth approach would adopt.
The global south is not a footnote
Any honest reckoning with the policy space has to confront the dimension that the IPS News analysis put squarely on the table: the income losses from generative AI are not falling evenly across geography. They are falling disproportionately on freelance and self-employed creators in the global south. UNESCO's data, repeated in the Re|Shaping Policies for Creativity report, is sobering. In developed economies, 67 per cent of people possess essential digital skills; in developing economies the figure is 28 per cent. Cultural and creative leadership in developed countries has reached 64 per cent women in some institutional categories; in developing nations it is 30 per cent. Public funding for culture sits below 0.6 per cent of global GDP and is projected to decline. Only 61 per cent of countries surveyed have intellectual property frameworks UNESCO considers adequate.
These structural baselines were already producing inequality. Generative AI compounds them. Viviana Rangel, a Colombian independent expert quoted in the IPS News analysis, framed the problem in a sentence: the region does not produce this kind of technology; it consumes it. The economic flow runs in one direction. Cultural workers in Lagos, Lima, Manila, and Karachi see their commissions evaporate as European and North American clients route work through models trained on a corpus from which their own contributions are statistically marginal. The royalties and rents from those models, when they exist at all, flow to collective management organisations and rights holders concentrated in the North Atlantic.
This dimension has implications for every instrument discussed above. A European AI cultural levy, however well designed, will tend to recapture funds from European AI providers and recycle them through European collective management organisations to predominantly European creators. That is not necessarily wrong, but it is not a global solution. The CISAC study's projection of 22 billion euros in cumulative losses to music and audiovisual creators globally over five years is a number that needs distributional analysis. Where do the losses fall? Where do the few gains fall? UNESCO's framing of the problem as a global development issue, rather than a North Atlantic intellectual property dispute, opens space for instruments that the copyright debate alone would not generate.
The most credible candidates, at this point, are international transfers built into the supranational architecture of AI governance. A share of any revenues raised through training data taxes, statutory remuneration rights, or AI cultural levies should be directed, by treaty or legislative carve-out, to a global fund supporting creators in the regions where the harm falls hardest. This is not charity. It is restitution for an extraction whose proceeds are presently retained by a small group of companies whose corpora include cultural output from every continent. UNESCO, by virtue of its mandate over cultural diversity and the global character of its 120-country reporting, is the obvious institutional vehicle, although the World Intellectual Property Organisation and the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development have credible roles to play.
The harder version of the global south argument concerns sovereignty. If a Senegalese government wants to protect its translators, illustrators, and musicians from market compression caused by foundation models trained largely outside its borders, what tools does it have? The honest answer is: not many, in the short term. National AI levies on a small market produce modest revenue. National copyright reform reaches AI labs only weakly. National public commissioning and basic income programmes are constrained by fiscal capacity. This is one reason why the architecture of any serious policy response has to be partly supranational. It is also why policy frameworks that treat the global south as an afterthought, or that solve the problem of the European illustrator while leaving the Lagos illustrator untouched, will be morally and politically unstable.
Who bears responsibility?
The question of responsibility is the one most likely to be flattened by political slogans, so it is worth taking slowly. There are at least five candidates for the moral and economic ledger, and a serious policy framework needs to assign weight to each rather than collapsing them into a single villain.
The AI labs themselves are the most obvious candidate. They built the systems whose outputs are compressing creative labour markets. They trained the models on corpora they did not pay for, in most cases, and they continue to extract economic rent from those corpora at scale. The defence offered by lab leadership tends to combine the argument that training on publicly available content is fair use with the argument that the productivity gains from foundation models will, over time, raise everyone's incomes including creators'. Both arguments are contestable. The fair use claim is being litigated across multiple jurisdictions. The productivity-spillover claim has, so far, generated almost no observable benefit for the working creators whose markets are contracting fastest. Responsibility, on any plausible reading, sits substantially with the labs, and the policy instruments above should be priced accordingly.
The platforms that distribute creative work are a second locus. Streaming services that ingest AI-generated music into the same recommendation streams as human-made music; stock image platforms that have become, in some categories, predominantly synthetic; commissioning marketplaces that allow buyers to specify AI-generated drafts as deliverables. Each of these platforms makes choices about how to label, reward, and surface human versus synthetic output. UNESCO's report observes that opaque algorithms and platform consolidation are themselves part of the structural undercutting. Procurement-style transparency requirements, content provenance standards, and labelling rules are the relevant instruments here, and platforms are properly the subjects of them.
Governments are the third candidate. They license the regulatory environment within which labs and platforms operate, and they hold the fiscal and statutory authority to introduce levies, statutory remuneration rights, public commissioning rules, and basic income schemes. They also have the slowest reflexes. The EU AI Act, the UK text-and-data-mining consultation, the patchwork of state-level AI laws in the United States, and the regulatory regimes emerging across Asia and Latin America operate on time horizons measured in years; market compression is occurring in quarters. Responsibility for that gap falls on legislatures and on public agencies that have not yet pivoted from a copyright-only frame to a market-structure frame.
The fourth candidate is the end user: the corporate or individual buyer who chooses an AI-generated cover, a synthetic voice-over, or an automated translation over a human alternative. Moral responsibility here is real but limited. Buyers respond to prices, and prices are an artefact of upstream institutional architecture; no buyer can plausibly be expected to internalise an externality the policy regime has not bothered to price. End-user weight matters most in the public sector, in editorial institutions whose readers care about provenance, and in industries where reputation rewards transparency. Disclosure rules, labelling standards, and provenance technologies make this responsibility legible and therefore actionable.
The fifth candidate, the most diffuse and the least talked about, is the public itself, conceived as the political constituency that decides whether to treat creative labour as economically valuable enough to defend. The Irish basic income scheme exists because Irish politics decided it should. The WGA and SAG-AFTRA agreements exist because audiences, in the end, did not want to consume an industry whose writers and performers were being squeezed past tolerance. The slow shift in European policy thinking towards an AI cultural levy exists because European publics and their elected representatives have, for now, not lost their attachment to the idea that cultural work is a public good worth supporting through institutional design. That political attachment is not automatic. It can erode. Where it erodes, the labs and platforms set the frame.
What a serious settlement would look like
A serious policy settlement, on the analysis above, is not a single instrument but a stack. Copyright reform sits at the bottom of the stack, addressing the upstream ingestion question that copyright is institutionally suited to handle. Statutory remuneration rights and AI cultural levies sit above it, addressing the substitution-side compression that copyright cannot reach. Public commissioning rules and procurement preferences sit above those, deploying the state's purchasing power to maintain a demand floor for human creative work. Universal creative income schemes, on the Irish model, sit above those, decoupling baseline livelihood from market success. Collective bargaining and trade-association infrastructure sits across the stack, providing the institutional capacity for creators to negotiate consent, attribution, and compensation in real-time as the technology evolves. International transfers, capitalised by the levies and routed through multilateral cultural institutions, sit on top, addressing the global south dimension that no national policy can solve alone.
No single country has the full stack today. Ireland has a basic income scheme. France and the European Union are debating a levy. The United Kingdom has a collective licensing prototype. Spain has labelling rules. Germany has a private copying levy heritage that could be retrofitted. The United States has the WGA and SAG-AFTRA agreements, the GSA procurement clause, and California's vendor certification regime. India has labelling thresholds. UNESCO has 8,100 catalogued policy measures across 120 countries. The pieces exist; what is missing is the integration.
This is, in some sense, the unromantic conclusion. The problem that generative AI has created in the creative economy is not, primarily, a problem that demands a new philosophical framework, although philosophical frameworks help. It is a problem that demands the assembly of a known set of instruments into a coherent stack, with serious institutional design and credible enforcement, and with explicit redistribution towards the creators and regions where the harm is concentrated. The political difficulty of that assembly is high. The intellectual difficulty is lower than the public debate sometimes implies.
The alternative, if no such stack is built, is reasonably easy to describe. The compression continues. The freelance creative class, in the global north and more sharply in the global south, contracts. The cultural production that survives concentrates among those with independent means, institutional employment, or audiences large enough to bypass the compression. The texture of cultural output narrows in ways that are hard to see in real time but legible in retrospect, in the same way the disappearance of regional newspapers became legible only after the fact. The labs and platforms continue to capture the rents from a corpus they did not build. Lodovico Folin-Calabi, the UNESCO director who told the press at the report's launch that the world must critically examine how these technologies are deployed and whose voices are represented, may turn out to have been describing not a turning point but a wake.
Whether the settlement gets built is, finally, a political question rather than a technical one. The technical question has answers. The political question, whether public, labs, platforms, and governments collectively decide that the structural losses already under way are worth correcting, has only the answers a generation chooses to give. The 24 per cent number is a forecast. It is also a decision, not yet made.
References & Sources
- UNESCO. Re|Shaping Policies for Creativity: Making Creativity Count. Fourth global monitoring report. Launched 18 February 2026. https://www.unesco.org/en/articles/creators-face-projected-global-revenue-losses-24-2028-new-unesco-report-shows
- UNESCO Diversity of Cultural Expressions. “Making creativity matter: UNESCO's latest Re|Shaping Policies for Creativity report calls for bold policy action.” February 2026. https://www.unesco.org/creativity/en/articles/making-creativity-matter-unescos-latest-reshaping-policies-creativity-report-calls-bold-policy
- United Nations News. “Artists face steep income decline due to AI, UNESCO finds.” 18 February 2026. https://news.un.org/en/story/2026/02/1166989
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- Bird & Bird. “Like Company v Google: CJEU Holds First-Ever Hearing on Generative AI and Copyright on 10 March 2026.” 2026. https://www.twobirds.com/en/insights/2026/like-company-v-google-cjeu-holds-first-ever-hearing-on-generative-ai-and-copyright
- Gibson Dunn. “GSA AI Procurement Rules Would Introduce New Disclosure and Use-Rights Requirements for Federal Contractors.” 2025. https://www.gibsondunn.com/gsa-ai-procurement-rules-would-introduce-new-disclosure-and-use-rights-requirements-for-federal-contractors/
- Ropes & Gray. “Newsom Signs Executive Order Establishing AI Vendor Certification and Procurement Framework.” April 2026. https://www.ropesgray.com/en/insights/alerts/2026/04/newsom-signs-executive-order-establishing-ai-vendor-certification-and-procurement-framework
- Euronews. “Spain could fine AI companies up to €35 million for mislabelling content.” 12 March 2025. https://www.euronews.com/next/2025/03/12/spain-could-fine-ai-companies-up-to-35-million-in-fines-for-mislabelling-content

Tim Green UK-based Systems Theorist & Independent Technology Writer
Tim explores the intersections of artificial intelligence, decentralised cognition, and posthuman ethics. His work, published at smarterarticles.co.uk, challenges dominant narratives of technological progress while proposing interdisciplinary frameworks for collective intelligence and digital stewardship.
His writing has been featured on Ground News and shared by independent researchers across both academic and technological communities.
ORCID: 0009-0002-0156-9795 Email: tim@smarterarticles.co.uk
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