On May 21, community leaders, business professionals, and innovators gathered for the 2026 South County Economic Summit, hosted by the UCSB Economic Forecast Project (EFP). As a longtime supporter of Santa Barbara’s business community, American Riviera Bank was proud to attend this important event and engage in the conversations shaping the region’s future.
Led by Peter Rupert, Professor of Economics at UC Santa Barbara, the Economic Forecast Project is a community-sponsored research initiative dedicated to providing reliable economic, demographic, health, and environmental data for Santa Barbara County and the Central Coast. Through extensive databases, annual publications, digital resources, and events such as the Economic Summit, the UCSB EFP equips local leaders with accurate, actionable insights to inform decision-making.

This year’s summit focused on the latest disruptor, artificial intelligence (AI), and its growing influence on regional and national economies. A key highlight of the event was the release and discussion of the annual EFP outlook, the Economic Forecast Project’s signature publication.
This outlook offers a detailed analysis of housing trends, labor force shifts, income growth, demographic movement, and broader economic indicators. Rupert emphasized that the publication is designed to help citizens, businesses, nonprofits, and policymakers make informed decisions grounded in data rather than speculation.
As economic uncertainty and technological transformation accelerate, this type of insight becomes more and more valuable for understanding not only where our region stands today but where it may be headed next.
Rupert opened with a personal reflection on artificial intelligence, acknowledging that while he may not consider himself an AI expert, he is fascinated by the extraordinary level of investment flowing into the sector and what that signals for the future. His economic outlook balances realism with perspective.
Nationally, the economy is entering a period of normalization, with forecasts projecting modest GDP growth near 2.2% and a stabilizing labor market. Inflation remains a concern, particularly as the Federal Reserve continues monitoring core inflation trends and debt levels, but Rupert urged attendees to resist reacting emotionally to daily headlines. Using historical GDP data stretching back to 1850, Rupert reminded the audience that while recessions and disruptions are inevitable, long-term economic growth has remained resilient.
Rupert also presented a case study on Austin, Texas, which was especially compelling. There, zoning reform and dramatically faster housing permit approvals have helped to create an influx of new multifamily housing supply. Between 2021 and 2025, inflation-adjusted rents fell 19%, while rents nationally rose 10%.
For Santa Barbara, where housing costs continue to outpace income growth, the example offered an important reminder that policy decisions can directly shape affordability outcomes.
UCSB Professor in Mechanical Engineering, Igor Mezić, spoke on where AI stands today and where it may be headed next.
His presentation highlighted both the opportunities and challenges ahead, particularly around energy consumption. AI-powered data centers are thought to consume lots of electricity, raising important questions around sustainability and infrastructure resilience. At the same time, these demands are accelerating investment in renewable energy and modular nuclear reactor technologies.

Mezić also discussed the evolution toward agentic AI, systems that are capable of perception, reasoning, adaptation, and autonomous action in real-world environments. Unlike today’s prompt-response systems, agentic AI has the potential to continuously learn from outcomes and operate with increasing independence, enabling breakthroughs in transportation, commerce, and industrial systems.
Overall, Mezić’s message was optimistic. The future of AI should not be something communities passively fear, but something they actively help shape through thoughtful innovation and responsible handling.
Zack Kass, Global AI Advisor, Former Head of Go-to-Market at OpenAI, and author of The Next Renaissance: AI and the Expansion of Human Potential, brought the summit to a close with a broader philosophical perspective.

Kass challenged many of the fears surrounding AI-driven job displacement, noting that technological revolutions throughout history have consistently created more opportunities than they destroy. He described what he called the “zombie apocalypse phenomenon,” where people tend to welcome automation in other industries while fearing it in their own.
His deeper point was that the true challenge ahead may not be employment itself, but humanity’s relationship with meaning and purpose in a world where work evolves rapidly.
Kass argued that technology should reduce the cost of living and improve the quality of life. When housing, education, and healthcare become unaffordable, he suggested, those failures are more often rooted in policy choices than in technological limitations.
His call to action was clear: communities must advocate for policies that ensure the benefits of innovation are broadly shared.
The summit reinforced the powerful truth that Santa Barbara is uniquely positioned at the intersection of research excellence, entrepreneurial energy, and community leadership.
From UCSB’s launch of a new Bachelor of Science in Artificial Intelligence to its growing emphasis on lifelong learning and innovation partnerships, our region is investing in the tools needed to compete in a rapidly evolving economy.
For American Riviera Bank, these conversations matter deeply.
As a local bank committed to supporting businesses, entrepreneurs, and families across the Central Coast, we recognize that understanding economic trends is essential to helping our clients navigate change and seize opportunity. With AI adoption increasing, businesses have an opportunity to implement new tools in their day-to-day operations. At the same time, these tools should be used thoughtfully, balancing their benefits with strong oversight, maintaining authenticity, protecting data, and managing risk. For more on how to apply these tools effectively, explore our blog covering AI implementation for small businesses.
The UCSB Economic Forecast Project’s 2026 South County Economic Summit was clear in its message that while AI will reshape industries and redefine work, Santa Barbara’s greatest advantage will remain its people – thoughtful, adaptable, and committed to building a stronger future together.
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