· 3 min read
illuminem summarises for you the essential news of the day. Read the full piece in The Economist or enjoy below:
🗞️ Driving the news: The convergence of artificial intelligence advances and Donald Trump’s second-term policies is accelerating the rise of corporate giants
• Large firms are benefiting disproportionately from automation, regulatory rollback, and global market dynamics, reinforcing a long-standing trend: the bigger the company, the greater the strategic advantage
• Recent economic indicators show that profitability gaps between large and small firms are reaching new highs
🔭 The context: Since the early 2000s, large companies have gained a consistent edge due to their ability to invest in intangible assets like software and intellectual property
• Globalisation and digitalisation further enabled scale, while recent political shifts — such as trade protectionism and looser antitrust enforcement — are now amplifying their dominance
• The concept of “superstar firms” emerged from this landscape, referring to businesses that capture a significant share of profits in their industries
🌍 Why it matters for the planet: While scale can offer efficiencies in sustainability efforts — such as reducing emissions through optimized logistics or funding green innovation — concentration of power in mega-corporations raises systemic risks
• These include reduced market diversity, weakened regulatory oversight, and slower adaptation to sustainability standards among smaller competitors
• In the long term, environmental policy could be shaped by fewer, more powerful actors whose interests may not always align with climate or social goals
⏭️ What's next: Corporate consolidation is expected to intensify, particularly in AI, energy, and infrastructure sectors
• Policymakers in the U.S. and EU are under pressure to revisit antitrust frameworks and tax regimes
• ESG investors and civil society will likely push for greater transparency and accountability from dominant firms
• Upcoming AI regulations and global climate disclosure mandates could become key battlegrounds for corporate influence and oversight
💬 One quote: “Scale doesn’t just breed profit — it breeds political clout,” warns Fiona Scott Morton, former chief economist at the U.S. Department of Justice’s antitrust division
📈 One stat: In the U.S., the profitability of the largest 10% of firms is now more than triple that of the bottom 90%, up from a 2:1 ratio in the early 2000s
See on illuminem's Data Hub™ the sustainability performance of tech companies like Amazon, and Meta
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