Companies are scrambling to curtail soaring AI costs

1vuio0pswjnm72 pts0 comments

Companies are scrambling to curtail soaring AI costs

Weekly edition

Current topics

Current topics

World

World

Business & economics

Business & economics

Opinion

Opinion

In depth

In depth

Culture, history & society

Culture, history & society

Our A-to-Zs

Our A-to-Zs

undefined undefined

Subscribe to The Economist<br>Unlock unlimited access to all our award-winning journalism, subscriber-only podcasts and newsletters

Subscribe to The Economist<br>Unlock unlimited access to all our award-winning journalism, subscriber-only podcasts and newsletters

Subscribe

Business | Token reckoning<br>Companies are scrambling to curtail soaring AI costs<br>For the heaviest users, tokenmaxxing is losing its appeal<br>Share

Jun 14th 2026|3 min read

“It’s going to be an absolute nightmare,” says an executive at a big American tech company. He is talking about an emerging problem for businesses that use artificial intelligence. AI agents—bots that can read, interpret and act—use masses of processing power and have started to run up huge bills. As they proliferate, the problem will grow. Big companies, the executive points out, typically use hundreds of software programs. If each of those offers agents (as they probably will), AI costs could spiral out of control.

This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “Token reckoning”

From the June 20th 2026 edition<br>Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents<br>⇒Explore the edition

ShareReuse this content

More from Business

Zombie unicorns are haunting Silicon Valley<br>Years of frothy valuations have created a nightmare

How to launch a tech product<br>Create a slick, irony-free corporate safe space

The Iran war has boosted Equinor, Norway’s energy giant<br>But it cannot turn a greying cash cow into a sprightly upstart

Tata’s big bets are yet to pay off<br>The Indian conglomerate’s boardroom drama highlights a speculative strategy

Tournament of losers<br>The World Cup is a festival for corporate has-beens

Fox, Roku and the next phase of the streaming wars<br>A $22bn deal creates a formidable new power in Hollywood

Get The Economist app on iOS or Android

The Economist

The Economist

The Economist Group

The Economist Group

Contact

Contact

Careers

Careers

To enhance your experience and ensure our website runs smoothly, we use cookies and similar technologies.<br>Manage cookies

economist business companies costs edition scrambling

Related Articles