TLDR: A new report from the Capgemini Research Institute reveals that agentic AI is poised to generate up to $450 billion in economic value by 2028. However, widespread adoption is hindered by declining trust in fully autonomous AI and a lack of organizational readiness. The report emphasizes that human oversight and robust human-AI collaboration are critical to realizing this potential, with executives increasingly recognizing the benefits of blended human-agent teams.
Paris, France – July 16, 2025 – The Capgemini Research Institute has released its latest report, ‘Rise of agentic AI: How trust is the key to human-AI collaboration,’ highlighting the transformative power of AI agents in business while underscoring the critical role of trust and human involvement in their successful deployment. The report, based on a survey of 1,500 senior executives across 14 countries, projects that agentic AI could unlock up to $450 billion in economic value by 2028 through a combination of revenue gains and cost savings.
Despite this significant economic promise, the path to widespread adoption and scaled deployment remains challenging. Currently, only 2% of organizations have fully scaled their agentic AI initiatives, with 12% at partial scale, 23% running pilots, and a majority (61%) still in the exploration or planning phases. This slow progress contrasts sharply with executive ambition, as nearly all (93%) business leaders believe that scaling AI agents within the next 12 months will provide a crucial competitive edge. Yet, nearly half of organizations lack a clear strategy for implementing these advanced AI systems.
A key finding of the report is a notable decline in trust in fully autonomous AI agents, which has dropped from 43% to 27% over the past year. This erosion of confidence is attributed to concerns around privacy, ethical implications, a lack of transparency, and a limited understanding of agentic capabilities. Nearly two in five executives believe the risks of implementing AI agents may outweigh the benefits.
However, the report strongly advocates for human-AI collaboration as the future. Organizations are discovering that AI agents deliver the greatest impact when humans remain actively involved. Approximately three-quarters of executives believe the benefits of human oversight outweigh the costs, and a remarkable 90% view human involvement in AI-driven workflows as either positive or cost-neutral. Within the next 12 months, over 60% of organizations anticipate forming human-agent teams where AI agents either act as subordinates or enhance human capabilities. By 2028, 38% of organizations expect AI agents to be integrated as full team members within human-supervised teams, making blended teams the new norm for driving productivity and innovation. Effective human-agent collaboration is projected to increase human engagement in high-value tasks by 65%.
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Challenges extend beyond trust to foundational readiness. Fewer than one in five organizations report high maturity in their data and technology infrastructure necessary for implementing agentic AI, with over 80% lacking mature AI infrastructure. To fully unlock the potential of AI agents, the report recommends that organizations redesign processes and reimagine business models, transform workforce structures to support human-agent collaboration, balance autonomy with human oversight to build trust, and strengthen their data and technology foundations for scalability.


