Author
Listed:
- Ali Ansari
- Mark Esposito
- Ava Fitoussy
- Liu Zhang
Abstract
The standard framing treats structured human-data work as transitional, a bridge between today's imperfect models and a future state where automation is complete. We challenge this view by modeling structured human data as a persistent production input: evaluation, rubric-based judgment, auditing, exception handling, and continual updates that convert raw model capability into dependable, deployable performance. These activities accumulate into a reusable AI capability stock that raises productivity by improving reliability on existing tasks and by expanding the frontier of task families for which AI can be used at high confidence. Crucially, this capability stock depreciates as tasks and contexts drift, standards evolve, and new edge cases emerge. In a tractable baseline model, an interior steady state implies a closed-form, strictly positive long-run labor share devoted to structured human-data work whenever depreciation is positive, a "no last mile" result in which maintenance demand persists even as models improve. We then microfound aggregate capability with a portfolio of task families featuring diminishing returns, frontier entry, and complementarity, generating reallocation toward low-maturity and bottleneck families and a Roy-style mechanism for within-structured wage dispersion. Finally, we map model objects to observable proxies using standard data layers, and provide a conservative calibration suggesting a 5-7% steady-state structured labor share in the long run.
Suggested Citation
Ali Ansari & Mark Esposito & Ava Fitoussy & Liu Zhang, 2026.
"No Last Mile: A Theory of the Human Data Market,"
Papers
2603.00932, arXiv.org.
Handle:
RePEc:arx:papers:2603.00932
Download full text from publisher
Corrections
All material on this site has been provided by the respective publishers and authors. You can help correct errors and omissions. When requesting a correction, please mention this item's handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2603.00932. See general information about how to correct material in RePEc.
If you have authored this item and are not yet registered with RePEc, we encourage you to do it here. This allows to link your profile to this item. It also allows you to accept potential citations to this item that we are uncertain about.
We have no bibliographic references for this item. You can help adding them by using this form .
If you know of missing items citing this one, you can help us creating those links by adding the relevant references in the same way as above, for each refering item. If you are a registered author of this item, you may also want to check the "citations" tab in your RePEc Author Service profile, as there may be some citations waiting for confirmation.
For technical questions regarding this item, or to correct its authors, title, abstract, bibliographic or download information, contact: arXiv administrators (email available below). General contact details of provider: http://arxiv.org/ .
Please note that corrections may take a couple of weeks to filter through
the various RePEc services.