
A new study issued by the Interactive
Advertising Bureau (IAB) highlights the growing digital economy -- which now makes up 18% of the U.S. GDP -- citing a rapid increase in internet-related jobs and the unprecedented rise of creators
since 2020.
In its 17th year, the IAB’s study shows that the digital economy in the U.S. has doubled since
2020, reaching $4.9 trillion in total and driving employment in the country. According to IAB, internet-related jobs are no longer centered in tech hubs, but are spread out around the region, growing
12 times faster than the broader labor market.
Since 2020 – a turning point in the industry -- the
digital economy has expanded 19% annually, compared to the whole U.S. economy, which grew at 7%. In 2008, when IAB began issuing this report, which is conducted every four years, internet-driven
employment totaled just 3 million jobs in the U.S. Now, the number is closer to 30 million.
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More than 11
million of those jobs are tied to digital economy work, while another 17 million are based in industries reliant on digital infrastructure, like education, entertainment, banking, retail, public
services and more.
Creators and social media influencers are responsible for driving the fastest job growth
in the digital economy.
Right now, there are 1.5 million Americans who identify as full-time digital creators -- eight times as many as in 2020, just five years ago.
Compared to the traditional media sector, which is expanding at 5% annually, the creator economy is growing at five
times that rate.
“The creator economy has clearly become a major factor in the digital growth story, driving spend, engagement, culture, and of course,
employment,” says IAB CEO David Cohen. “The impact is felt across the ecosystem, shifting the way that we think about information, entertainment, commerce, and community. In some ways, it
has become a self-fulfilling prophecy. The more that creators succeed, the stronger the platforms they use become.”
Cohen adds that the digital economy
has become “a foundational part of American GDP,” with the emergence of more AI-powered technology destined to further boost the importance of the sector. Cohen argues that it is time for
more policymakers and regulators to pass legislation that ensures that the appropriate foundation and infrastructure is in place to prioritize continued innovation within the space.