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Corporate GCRs
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Corporate GCRs

Corporate Global Catastrophic Risks (C-GCRs)

Hauke.Hillebrandt@gmail.com

TOC

Epistemic status

Summary

  1. Are corporations growing ever larger?
  2. Do corporations optimize to become exponentially more powerful over time?
  3. Do corporations cause exponentially larger externalities over time?
  4. Do corporations cause regulatory capture proportional to their size?
  5. Are anthropogenic and emergent technological GCRs a form of C-GCR?
  6. C-GCR reduction is more effective than targeted GCR from emerging tech reduction
  7. Policy solutions to decrease corporate GCRs
  1. Breaking up big corporations
  2. Increasing corporate taxes for bigger corporations
  3. Mission hedging to fund regulators
  4. Diversifying corporate ownership through sovereign wealth funds and reducing home bias
  1. Coda: Are corporations optimization demons?

Epistemic status

Very uncertain and speculative. I don't excessively hedge my claims throughout for clarity's sake ('better wrong than vague').

Summary

Are corporations causing global catastrophic risks (C-GCRs)?

Here, I argue for this to be true, based on the following claims:

  1. Corporations grow ever larger over time.
  2. Corporations grow exponentially more powerful over time.
  3. Corporations cause exponentially more regulatory capture over time.
  4. Corporations cause exponentially larger externalities over time.

If all these claims are true and cannot be falsified, then it follows that the externalities of big, powerful, unregulated corporations will increase over time to the level of GCRs.

I then argue for the following corollaries:

  1. Corporations are already the distal cause and main driver of anthropogenic and emergent technological GCRs such as global catastrophic biological risks (GCBRs).
  2. C-GCRs are a bigger threat than GCRs from state actors.
  3. C-GCR reduction is more effective than targeted GCR reduction because it is broader, large in scale, neglected, and solvable.

I suggest concrete policy proposals to reduce C-GCRs, by diversifying corporate ownership, enforcing corporate taxes, and optimizing funding for regulatory agencies.

  1. Are corporations growing ever larger?

Economic theory suggests that corporations try to maximize profits. Incentives create strong selective pressure for corporations to grow (e.g. because they benefit from economies of scale).[1]

Empirically, corporations have become much bigger especially in the last ~20 years, because of cross-border mergers & acquisitions.[2] 

This trend should continue: some corporations' market capitalizations are ~$1tn.[6] This is a proxy for market valuation—the discounted sum of all future profits. Profits and revenues correlate, so the market predicts that corporate revenues and thus power will increase. Multinationals can grow bigger than non-multinationals because of cross-border M&A.[7]

As a rule, corporations grow larger over time.

  1. Do corporations optimize to become exponentially more powerful over time?

Power is roughly proportional to how many resources an agent has to achieve its goals.

Recently, researchers have proposed that states' 'budgets' (tax revenues) and corporations' 'budgets' (revenues minus their profits) are comparable in that they are crude, but useful proxies for their power (despite corporations and states spending on different things).[8] 

For instance, Shell's revenue/budget to sell fossil fuels is $272bn.[9] About half of Boeing's $96bn revenue comes from its defense contractor subsidiary—the amount of power to sell military equipment.

Big state actors (e.g. U.S., EU, China) have the biggest budgets (+$1tn).[10] But, surprisingly, some corporations now have ~$0.5tn budgets. Walmart has higher revenues than Spain or Australia and Apple has higher revenues than Belgium or Mexico. 71 out of the 100 actors with the most revenue/power are corporations with combined budgets of $10tn vs. $18tn in combined budgets of the 29 states (see Appendix; spreadsheet).

If a corporation spends just 0.1% of its $0.5tn annual budget on things that might cause negative externalities, this equates to $0.5bn. For instance, Apple spends >$1bn/year on marketing. Lobbying budgets could increase to a similar level.

Also, corporations sometimes combine their power. For instance, if lobbying for certain favorable regulations benefits a whole industry, this creates a free-rider problem. Corporations routinely solve this problem by sharing lobbying costs and throwing budgets together to fund industry bodies and trade associations. This way, corporations become even more powerful. In contrast, state power is curtailed by mandatory and entitlement spending taking up an increasing share of their budgets (e.g. >70% in the US).[11]

Overall, corporate power has increased to the level of many state actors.

  1. Do corporations cause exponentially larger externalities over time?

As corporations grow, they create exponentially larger:

Historically, big corporations robustly increased net social welfare—outweighing negative externalities.[12],[13],[14] Positive externalities: Larger corporations contribute disproportionately to the economic performance of countries- they are more productive, pay higher wages, enjoy higher profits and are more successful in international markets.[15] Uber's easily quantifiable consumer surplus is ~$3bn.[16] Even the attention economy, vilified for wasting trillions in people's time, might actually create billions in consumer surplus through more content and more efficient ads.[17]

But Big Business (such as Big Oil, Tobacco, Alcohol, Pharma, Food, Meat, Agro, Tech, Media, Finance), also creates increasingly negative externalities and harm consumers.

Empirically, we have seen Big Business increasingly playing a large part in the following negative externalities:

In theory, corporate profit-maximization functions should correlate strongly with the social welfare maximization function. But if consumer choice does not correlate perfectly with (long-term average, total) utility (of all morally-relevant agents), then even a small divergence might result in side-effects causing large negative externalities. Because destroying value is easier than creating value, negative externalities can become very high as evidenced by the examples above. Consider climate change: this is not merely a coincidence, but the result of something inevitably causing harm as a by-product of ruthless optimization.

Thus, as a rule, as corporations grow they cause exponentially larger positive externalities, consumer surplus and utility, but also cause exponentially larger negative externalities, harm consumers and disutility.

  1. Do corporations cause regulatory capture proportional to their size?

In economics, governments are to reduce businesses' negative externalities via regulation. But governments are increasingly unable to regulate large corporations. Why?

  1. Historically, corporate and state power was coupled, because corporate tax on profits increased government budgets proportionally. But average global corporate tax rates are decreasing, from 47% (GDP-weighted: 39%) in 1980 to only 23% (GDP-weighted: 26%) in 2018.[28] Corporations actively try to avoid taxes.[29]
  2. Governments' capacity to regulate has decreased: between 1979 and 2005, both US House committee and Government Accountability Office staff decreased by ~40%; Research Service staff, which provides nonpartisan policy analysis to lawmakers, by 20%.[30]
  3. Corporations can use lobbying for regulatory capture[31]. The economics literature has long worried about increasing regulatory capture.[32] Generally, lobbying has increased in recent years[33]. In the US, corporations spend about $3bn/year lobbying the government[34]. In the EU, lobbying has also increased in recent years.[35] In particular, Big Tech's and Finance's lobbying budgets have increased.[36],[37]

In general, increasingly powerful corporations can promote their interests through lobbying and evade increasingly weak government regulation through regulatory capture.

  1. Are anthropogenic and emergent technological GCRs a form of C-GCR?

Because humanity has survived for >200k years, natural GCRs (e.g. asteroids, pandemics) only have a 0.1%-1% risk of causing extinction per century. This might be 10x less than man-made GCRs (e.g. nuclear war, engineered bioweapons, AI, climate change).[38], [39]

Corporations spend more on R&D than governments.[40] Generally, corporations are relevant actors in areas of anthropogenic GCRs from emerging technology such as risks from AI[41], GCBRs[42], climate change, and war.

Corporations also lobby on GCR-relevant issues:

Thus, corporations deserve special attention when horizon-scanning for emerging technological GCRs as they are their distal cause.

  1. C-GCR reduction is more effective than targeted GCR from emerging tech reduction

Reducing C-GCRs is a more generalized intervention than targeted reduction of GCRs from emerging tech. Its broad cross-cutting nature makes it more effective.[63] 

Because corporations will create as of yet unknown emerging tech that causes GCRs, C-GCR reduction is good for horizon-scanning and preventative GCR reduction. Regulators or altruists who focus on particular GCRs play Whac-A-Mole with corporations. Every industry can create its own GCR- for instance, see research on GCRs from chemicals.[64] Even if one is particularly concerned about just one GCR from say AI, C-GCR prevention is more effective than targeted GCR reduction, because the distal source of it comes from corporations.

What can be done? I go through some policies in the next sections.

  1. Policy solutions to decrease corporate GCRs

  1. Breaking up big corporations

A natural response might be to limit corporate size, however, I do not think this is a good policy. In theory, because corporations cause exponentially more disutility as they grow, breaking up big corporations (or preventing M&A) to lower their power might reduce the size of their externalities. But because there is no consensus amongst economists on whether governments should regulate the size of big corporations more generally (e.g. through preventing M&A or breaking them up).[65],[66], this policy seems very intractable, as countries will worry too much about their economic competitiveness.

CSET- Antitrust and Artificial Intelligence

  1. Increasing corporate taxes for bigger corporations

Corporate taxes have some advantages, but they are not usually considered to be Pigovian[67] (and might also have other drawbacks[68]). But in light of C-GCRs, corporate taxes become Pigovian because corporations are usually causing large externalities. Increasing (the progressiveness of) corporate taxes (i.e. the bigger the corporation the higher the tax)[69] might reduce C-GCRs.

But currently corporate tax is regressive. Why? Because bigger corporations are better at avoiding tax by shifting profits overseas, and thus have a lower tax rate than smaller firms.[70] A politically tractable solution might be to reduce corporate tax avoidance.

A solution might be to tax the self-assessed value of a corporation's domestic legal entity. [71] At the self-assessed value would ba strike price that they'd be required to sell it to anyone. For instance, Apple pays little corporate tax in the UK, because Apple UK does not make a lot of profit. But getting Apple to give a true estimate of the value of Apple UK Ltd and putting say a 5% tax might be harder to avoid.

  1. Mission hedging to fund regulators

A foundation whose mission is to stop climate change can invest their endowment using 'mission hedging' by investing in fossil fuel stocks.[72] This way it has more money to give to organizations that combat climate change when more fossil fuels are burned, fossil fuel stocks go up and climate change will get particularly bad. When fewer fossil fuels are burnt and fossil fuels stocks go down, the foundation will have less money, but it does not need the money as much. Generally, increasing investment in objectionable corporations creates a hedge around an actor's mission, which sometimes, maximizes expected utility.[73]

Similarly, governments can use mission hedging to reduce C-GCRs. For instance, governments can set up a sovereign wealth fund that invests in an index fund that covers all corporations weighted by market capitalization or revenue. Dividends from individual corporate stocks could then be used to fund regulators so their budgets increase with corporate size. In other words, if Apple revenue/power increases and Apple stocks generate higher returns, this would increase the staff/budget of a department within a regulatory agency tasked with regulating Apple. Similarly, the sovereign wealth fund could also own stocks of foreign firms to fund intelligence agencies to monitor foreign corporations.

  1. Diversifying corporate ownership through sovereign wealth funds and reducing home bias

If the ownership of corporations would be more diversified more, then there would be fewer incentives to create externalities. In other words, if everyone were a shareholder of Big Oil, then shareholder value might be maximized by reducing emissions. This is because both profits and negative externalities are shared more widely and nobody has an advantage from profiting from untaxed externalities.

This might also reduce arms races: if a technology's up- and downsides are shared, then it decreases adversarialism and increases collaboration.[74] Relatively few individuals sometimes own and control major AI corps (FAANG).[75],[76] In contrast, ~25% of Baidu is owned by 10 Western funds (Vanguard, Blackrock, etc).[77]

Governments setting up sovereign wealth funds that invest in an index fund that covers all corporations weighted by market capitalization or revenue would diversify ownership.

This policy might be politically tractable. Countries such as China now allow fully foreign-owned enterprises,[78] increasing government-ownership of corporations has recently been suggested,[79] and sovereign wealth funds might increase tax receipts[80] and create a hedge against risks to the domestic economy. Note that governments being minority shareholders across an industry would be different from state-owned enterprises that often create more externalities than private firms.[81]

Another way to diversify ownership of corporations might be to reduce home bias, where countries and people hold suboptimal amounts of foreign equity. US investors have 78% of their equity portfolio in U.S. stocks, which are only a third of world market portfolio, by capitalization.[82] Reducing home bias as an intervention might be tractable because getting home biased investors to diversify ownership of corporations might also benefit them financially. This might be an alternative to windfall clauses.[83] Governments could grant tax incentives to their citizens invest in foreign equities or give incentives for diversifying their portfolio.

Coda: Are corporations optimization demons?

2.5bn years ago stromatolites changed the atmosphere from a CO2-rich to O2-rich through photosynthesis, because they had no competition.[84] A corporation might not be a superintelligence,[85] but it might create one. We should not let corporations lead on AI governance as has been suggested.[86] Usually, CSR/PR is relatively small relative to lobbying activities and externalities corporations create (e.g. fossil fuel companies will sometimes come out for a carbon tax, but then spend money on anti-climate lobbying; corporations will invest a small amount of money into AI safety but spend much more AI R&D).

In sum, I think it might be useful to think of corporations as dangerous optimization demons which will cause GCRs if left unchecked by altruism and philanthropy.[87]


Appendix: Top 100 state and corporate actor by revenue ≈ power (Fortune Global 2017)

Adapted from Barbic et al. 'States versus Corporations'

Spreadsheet here

1

United States

$3,363bn

2

China

$2,465bn

3

Japan

$1,696bn

4

Germany

$1,507bn

5

France

$1,288bn

6

United Kingdom

$996bn

7

Italy

$843bn

8

Brazil

$632bn

9

Canada

$595bn

10

Walmart

US

$482bn

11

Spain

$461bn

12

Australia

$421bn

13

State Grid

CN

$330bn

14

Netherlands

$323bn

15

Korea

$304bn

16

ChinaNat.Petroleum

CN

$299bn

17

Sinopec Group

CN

$294bn

18

Royal Dutch Shell

NL/GB

$272bn

19

Sweden

$248bn

20

ExxonMobil

US

$246bn

21

Volkswagen

$237bn

22

Toyota Motor

JP

$237bn

23

Apple

US

$234bn

24

Belgium

$232bn

25

BP

GB

$226bn

26

Mexico

$224bn

27

Switzerland

$216bn

28

Berkshire Hathaway

US

$211bn

29

India

$200bn

30

Norway

$200bn

31

McKesson

US

$192bn

32

Russia

$187bn

33

Austria

$187bn

34

Turkey

$184bn

35

Samsung Electronics

KR

$177bn

36

Glencore

CH/JE

$170bn

37

ICBC

CN

$167bn

38

Daimler

DE

$166bn

39

UnitedHealthGroup

US

$157bn

40

Denmark

$157bn

41

EXOR Group

IT/NL

$154bn

42

CVS Health

US

$153bn

43

General Motors

US

$152bn

44

VitolNL/CH

$152bn

45

Ford Motor

US

$151bn

46

ChinaConstr.Bank

CN

$150bn

47

Saudi Arabia

$150bn

48

AT&T

US

$147bn

49

Total

FR

$143bn

50

Hon Hai Precision Ind.

TW

$141bn

51

General Electric

US

$140bn

52

CSCEC

CN

$139bn

53

AmerisourceBergen

US

$136bn

54

Agricultural Bank of China

CN

$133bn

55

Verizon

US

$132bn

56

Chevron

US

$131bn

57

E.ON

DE

$130bn

58

AXA

FR

$129bn

59

Indonesia

$129bn

60

Finland

$128bn

61

Allianz

DE

$123bn

62

Bank of China

CN

$122bn

63

Honda Motor

JP

$121bn

64

Cargill

US

$120bn

65

Japan Post Holdings

JP

$119bn

66

Costco

US

$116bn

67

Argentina

$116bn

68

BNPParibas

FR

$112bn

69

FannieMae

US

$111bn

70

PingAnInsurance

CN

$110bn

71

Kroger

US

$109bn

72

Société Générale

FR

$108bn

73

Amazon.com

US

$107bn

74

ChinaMobile Com.

CN

$106bn

75

SAIC Motor

CN

$105bn

76

Walgreens Boots Alliance

US

$104bn

77

HP

US

$103bn

78

Assicurazioni Generali

IT

$103bn

79

Cardinal Health

US

$103bn

80

BMW

DE

$102bn

81

Express Scripts Holding

US

$102bn

82

Nissan Motor

JP

$102bn

83

ChinaLife Insurance

CN

$101bn

84

J.P.Morgan Chase

US

$101bn

85

Koch Industries

US

$100bn

86

Gazprom

RU

$99bn

87

China Railway Eng.

CN

$99bn

88

Petrobras

BR

$97bn

89

Schwarz Group

DE

$97bn

90

Trafigura Group

NL/SG

$97bn

91

Nippon Telegraph & Tel.

JP

$96bn

92

Boeing

US

$96bn

93

Venezuela

$96bn

94

China Railway Constr.

CN

$95bn

95

Microsoft

US

$94bn

96

Bank of America Corp.

US

$93bn

97

ENI

IT

$93bn

98

Greece

$93bn

99

Nestlé

CH

$92bn

100

WellsFargo

US

$90bn

Graph shows mergers and acquisitions in the banking sector

Banking M&A chart


Notes

Notes

[2009.13676] The Grey Hoodie Project: Big Tobacco, Big Tech, and the threat on academic integrity 

'One of the lesser known tactics of that campaign was to actually fund communication strategies that shifted the blame and the responsibility for carbon emissions from the corporations that are responsible for the systems that we rely on to get our energy from, to the individual.

ExxonMobil actually funding environmental organizations that encourage people to recycle and to drive less and to eat less meat, etc, etc. I'm not saying that we shouldn't do those things; we should absolutely do everything that we can to reduce our personal carbon footprint.' [88]

Why Not Just: Think of AGI Like a Corporation?

Assessing Corporate Influence on Climate Change Dialogue | SpringerLink 

https://influencemap.org/site/data/000/079/Corporate_Influence.pdf 

Capitalism in Trouble When Companies Drain Value From Economy- Bloomberg 

https://wp0.vanderbilt.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/78/Spiro.pdf

https://www.ghi-dc.org/fileadmin/user_upload/GHI_Washington/Publications/Bulletin45/bu45_043.pdf 

ctrl + f: value-added for a different measure of corporate power

CorporationDIS_2 

Effective altruism discussion

Market Value For The World 100 Largest Multinational Corporations

$16 trillion

(PwC, 2015).

2015

State capture

New Report Calls Out Banks that Make Nuclear Weapons Investments- Future of Life Institute

differential tech dev: bigger state is good. higher taxes are good

more common law vs. civil law. Big fines for big corporations. huge fines for corporations.

Tax for FCA oder nuclear Industry

Chris Hughes Worked to Create Facebook. Now, He Is Working to Break It Up.-

New Report: Don't Be Evil- A Survey of the Tech Sector's Stance on Lethal Autonomous Weapons- Future of Life Institute

National and Transnational Security Implications of Asymmetric Access to and Use of Biological Data | Bioengineering and Biotechnology

- market cap is a direct measure of power, because it's the discounted future profits that are at stake. Apple's future profit is 1 trillion. If they're willing to spend 1% of these profits to further their objectives, then this is $10 billion. The market cap of Philip Morris alone is $140 billion.[33] Other harmful industries are also large enough to make mounting an effective impact investing campaign seem difficult. For example, the world's largest oil and gas companies had a market capitalisation of $4 trillion at the end of 2012.[34]

Goliath | Book by Matt Stoller | Official Publisher Page

More than third of foreign investment is multinationals dodging tax | Financial Times

Taxing investment income is complicated – The sideways view

Very real progress on the market concentration debate- Marginal REVOLUTION

Antitrust policy, increasingly focused on elaborating on a specific class of economic models, has largely ignored broad trends in the growth of market power and categories of market power that had clear economic logic but did not fit the standard models, such as the power of institutional investors, the power of employers, and the dynamics of high tech mergers. As a result, despite ever increasing expertise, evidence increasingly suggests that market power is near an all-time high in US history. This rise of market power largely unaddressed by existing antitrust institutions appears an important component of rising inequality, wage stagnation and the growth of illiberal populism of the left and right.

A Genocide Incited on Facebook, With Posts From Myanmar's Military- The New York Times

Stakeholder Capitalism- IGM Forum

Too Much Dark Money In Almonds | Slate Star Codex

JADE LEUNG- DPHIL THESIS- Sep19.pdf

Why is there so little money in politics?

! Rent-seeking- Wikipedia

Should Artificial Intelligence Governance be Centralised? 

Goliath: The 100-Year War Between Monopoly Power and Democracy

Policy BriefHm... but I actually just had another idea of how to fund regulators perhaps reducing perverse incentives and also optimizing more for negative externalities.

Consider that the EU has fined Google $10bn. I think currently this is disbursed to go into the general budget.

But maybe one could buy Google stocks (or a technology ETF) with that money and use the dividends to fund digital regulation.

This way regulators would be incentivized to reduce negative externalities (through fining companies and the industry), but then also they'd be held back to completely wreck industries or companies, because they're financed by the overall health of the industry after the fine.

corporate europe observatory recommended by Legacies.now


[1] Breaking down the barriers to firm growth in Europe

[2] States versus Corporations

[3] FiveThirtyEight - Big Business Is Getting Bigger

[4] McKinsey Global Institute ‘Superstars’—The dynamics of firms, sectors, and cities leading the global economy

[5] David Autor - The Fall of the Labor Share and the Rise of Superstar Firms

[6] List of public corporations by market capitalization

[7] List of multinational corporations - Wikipedia

[8] States versus Corporations

[9] States versus Corporations

[10] Wikipedia — List of public corporations by market capitalization

[11] Wikipedia - US federal budget #Mandatory spending and entitlements

[12] Steven Pinker - Enlightenment Now

[13] Tyler Cowen - Big Business

[14] Big Is Beautiful

[15] Breaking down the barriers to firm growth in Europe

[16] Using Big Data to Estimate Consumer Surplus

[17] The Economics of Attention Markets

[18] Health Effects of Overweight and Obesity in 195 Countries over 25 Years

[19] The Global Tobacco Epidemic

[20] Factory farming - 80,000 Hours

[21] Staff Papers 

[22] Economic downturns, universal health coverage, and cancer mortality in high-income and middle-income countries, 1990–2010

[23] Financial crisis may have caused 500,000 cancer deaths worldwide: study

[24] Prison–industrial complex - Wikipedia

[25] Are private prisons driving mass incarceration?

[26] Problematic smartphone use: Digital approaches to an emerging public health problem

[27] Adam Alter - Irresistible

[28] Tax Foundation - Corporate Tax Rates Around the World

[29] Corporate Tax Avoidance Remains Rampant

[30] Lindsey - The Captured Economy

[31] Stigler - The Theory of Economic Regulation

[32] Regulatory Capture - A Review

[33] Modern Lobbying: A Relationship Market

[34] Tyler Cowen - Big Business

[35] LobbyFacts Database

[36] Google, Amazon, and Facebook all spent record amounts last year lobbying the US government

[37] Igan - Bank Lobbying: Regulatory Capture and Beyond

[38] Toby Ord — Will We Cause Our Own Extinction? Natural versus Anthropogenic Extinction Risks

[39] An upper bound for the background rate of human extinction.  

[40] Global private and public R&D funding

[41] The Malicious Use of Artificial Intelligence: Forecasting, Prevention, and Mitigation

[42] Schoch-Spana et al. - Global Catastrophic Biological Risks: Toward a Working Definition

[43] Congress Of The United States Congressional Budget Office—Approaches for Managing the Costs of U.S. Nuclear Forces, 2017 to 2046

[44] Center for Biosafety Research and Strategy, Tianjin University, China — Synthetic biology: Recent progress, biosafety and biosecurity concerns, and possible solutions

[45] Synthetic Biology in the Driving Seat of the Bioeconomy

[46] A biomedical military–industrial complex?

[47] Artificial intelligence: The next digital frontier? - McKinsey 

[48] 80000hours.org - US AI policy profile 

[49] Thomas Sittler - A shift in arguments for AI risk

[50] World energy expenditures

[51] Energy expenditure, economic growth, and the minimum EROI of society

[52] Influencemap.org - Big Oil's Real Agenda on Climate Change

[53] John Halstead - Is climate change an existential risk?

[54] Defense Contractors Say Russian Threat Is Great 

[55] Who's Really Driving Nuclear-Weapons Production?

[56] Tyler Cowen - Big Business

[57] Don't Bank on the Bomb

[58] Light penalties and lax oversight encourage weak safety culture at nuclear weapons labs

[59] The Russian Nuclear-Industrial-Complex 

[60] Unwarranted Influence? The Impact of the Biotech-Pharmaceutical Industry on U.S. Policy on the BWC Verification Protocol

[61] Classifying global catastrophic risks

[62] A Nuclear Complex? A Network Visualization of Japan’s Nuclear Industry and Regulatory Elite

[63] Nick Beckstead - A Proposed Adjustment to the Astronomical Waste Argument

[64] Global Catastrophic Risks from Chemical Contamination

[65] IGM Forum - Breaking Up Large Tech Companies

[66] IGM Forum - Breaking up European Champions

[67] Why Tax Corporations?

[68] Good recent review paper on corporate taxes effects

[69] Why isn't the corporate income tax progressive?

[70] Corporate Tax Avoidance Remains Rampant

[71] Glen Weyl – Radical Markets

[72] Brigitte Roth Tran - Divest, Disregard, or Double Down?

[73] Hauke Hillebrandt - A generalized strategy of 'mission hedging'

[74] Amanda Askell on the 80k podcast

[75] The Top 5 Google Shareholders

[76] The Top 6 Shareholders of Facebook

[77] Baidu Shareholders

[78] China unveils draft law to allow fully foreign-owned enterprises

[79] Mariana Mazzucato - The Entrepreneurial State

[80] Paul Christiano on Sovereign Wealth Funds

[81] When Governments Regulate Governments

[82] Literature review on Home Bias

[83] Allen Defoe - AI Strategy, Policy, and Governance

[84] Stromatolites

[85] Corporations vs. superintelligences - Arbital

[86] Jade Leung - Why Companies Should be Leading on AI Governance

[87] Paul Christiano - More realistic tales of doom

[88]  Not Cool Ep 25: Mario Molina on climate action - Future of Life Institute