Computable Asset Ratio (CAR)
CARShare of Assets That Are Registered, Identified, Structured, Verified, Fresh, Interoperable, Discoverable, and Actionable
CAR measures the share of assets that are computable for AI-mediated allocation.
Definition
CAR measures asset-level computability—the degree to which assets are registered, identified, structured, verified, fresh, interoperable, discoverable, and actionable for AI-mediated allocation.
CAR assesses what proportion of assets meet eight computability criteria: registered, identified, structured, verified, fresh, interoperable, discoverable, and actionable. Higher CAR indicates better AI-mediated allocability.
Conceptual Formula
CAR(e) = (N_computable / N_total) × 100, where N_computable=assets meeting all eight computability criteria.What This Index Measures
CAR measures asset-level AI allocability readiness.
By definition: CAR reflects the share of assets computable for AI-mediated allocation.
Implications
- Higher CAR correlates with better AI-mediated allocability
Methodology
Type
index construction
Data Sources
Confidence Level
medium
Description
CAR(e) = (N_computable / N_total) × 100, where N_computable=assets meeting all eight computability criteria.
Limitations
- Requires comprehensive asset inventory
- Computability criteria require domain-specific calibration
Key Takeaways
Key Points
- CAR scales 0-100%
- Eight-criteria computability measure
- Asset-level readiness indicator
Target Audience
Relevance Tags
Source Paper
Citation
For the Computable Asset Ratio (CAR), see HomeSelf Research (2026), The Zero-Click Economy.