The global adoption of artificial intelligence continues to accelerate, reaching new milestones in the first quarter of 2026. According to a new report by Microsoft, generative artificial intelligence tools are now being utilized by 17.8 percent of the working-age population worldwide. This is an increase from the previous 16.3 percent usage rate.
Despite this growth in global AI adoption, the data reveals a troubling trend regarding technology access. The disparity between wealthy and developing countries is expanding, creating a stark digital divide. As global AI adoption reshapes modern workflows, ensuring equitable access to these powerful tools remains a significant challenge.
The Expanding Gap Between Developed and Developing Nations
While artificial intelligence integrates into daily tasks, the benefits are not shared equally. In developed countries, 27.5 percent of people aged fifteen to sixty-four used a generative artificial intelligence tool during the first quarter of 2026. In contrast, only 15.4 percent of the working-age population in the developing world utilized similar technologies.
This gap widened by 1.5 percentage points since the second half of 2025. According to the Microsoft AI Economy Institute, this growing divide stems from broader infrastructural and educational inequalities. Disparities in access to reliable electricity, basic digital skills, and internet connectivity are primary factors preventing developing nations from keeping pace.
Language Barriers and the Asian Market Catch-Up
Another major hurdle slowing the spread of artificial intelligence is language capability. Historically, model performance has been stronger in English because most major companies developing these systems are based in the United States. As a result, the adoption of generative tools has been noticeably slower in non-English-speaking countries.
However, the technology is evolving past linguistic limitations. Progress in processing non-European languages is currently fueling a catch-up in adoption rates. Microsoft noted that improvements in processing Asian languages have driven momentum in Japan, South Korea, and Thailand.
Top Countries Leading the Artificial Intelligence Transition
The United Arab Emirates holds the top position globally, boasting a 70.1 percent adoption rate among its working-age population. Other countries rounding out the highest rankings include Singapore, Norway, Ireland, and France. Currently, twenty-six different economies see more than 30 percent of their working-age populations utilizing artificial intelligence.
Interestingly, the United States ranks twenty-first on the national leaderboard with a 31.3 percent usage rate, moving up from twenty-fourth place. This ranking comes despite the United States being home to dominant large models such as ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini. China, the world’s second-largest economy and a major competitor in the technology race, recorded a usage rate of 16.4 percent.
How Microsoft Measures the Global Statistics
Tracking these worldwide trends involves a specific methodology. Microsoft derives its estimates primarily from measurements taken from computers running Windows and Microsoft products, such as Bing and Copilot. The data is adjusted to account for differences in device market share, internet penetration, and country population.
However, there are limitations to this tracking method. The measurements only partially capture usage on Apple devices. Additionally, researchers noted a lack of consolidated data for China, Iran, and Russia, which impacts the broader global picture.
Artificial Intelligence Impact on Software Development
The artificial intelligence surge is profoundly affecting the tech labor market, particularly in software engineering. The first quarter of 2026 saw a dramatic increase in the production of software code, aided by tools like Anthropic’s Claude Code, OpenAI’s Codex, and Microsoft’s GitHub Copilot. Globally, Git pushes increased by 78 percent year over year.
Microsoft argues these tools could increase developer demand, suggesting that as productivity rises, the cost of building software decreases. If software demand remains elastic, organizations can build more applications across various use cases.
Employment data support this optimistic view. In 2025, software developer employment in the United States hit a record high of 2.2 million, an 8.5 percent year-over-year increase. Early figures for 2026 show that developer employment in March was about 4 percent higher than in March 2025.
Tech Industry Layoffs Tell a Complex Story
Despite positive indicators in software development, Microsoft cautions that it is too early to know the full impact of artificial intelligence on the broader labor market. Pushing back against automation fears, the data remains mixed when observing the entire technology sector.
For the first time in history, Microsoft offered voluntary departures to nearly 9,000 of its United States-based employees in April. Furthermore, a private aggregator called Layoffs. fyi reports that nearly 99,000 people have been laid off across the tech sector since January 1, primarily in the United States.
