When Your Tech Giants Start Looking Like Cartels
Paul Krugman has a theory, and it's not subtle. The Nobel Prize-winning economist published a newsletter on Tuesday declaring that the United States has become a "digital narco-state" where social media companies operate with the unchecked power of drug cartels.
His argument goes like this: imagine if heroin were completely legal, marketed aggressively to everyone, and grew into a massive multibillion-dollar industry despite causing obvious societal harm. Sounds dystopian, right? Well, Krugman says we're already living in that world, except replace heroin with social media platforms.
The platforms "do considerable harm" while continuing to operate with minimal oversight, he wrote. But the comparison doesn't stop at addiction and societal damage. According to Krugman, America's social media billionaires have accumulated enough influence to shape US foreign policy itself, punishing American allies who dare to regulate their business models.
How Tech Money Kills Legislation
Krugman pointed to Europe's Digital Services Act as a case study in tech resistance. The US government has pushed back against the regulations, driven partly by what Krugman called "MAGA fury" but also by tech executives who despise stricter oversight.
Domestically, the picture looks even bleaker. Attempts to pass online safety legislation in the United States have collapsed under Silicon Valley pressure. "Mark Zuckerberg and his billions came to town, and the legislation died," Krugman said bluntly.
The financial incentives are staggering. Krugman flagged a recent Reuters report showing that Meta Platforms Inc. (META) pulled in $16 billion in advertising revenue last year from scams and banned products alone. That's not a rounding error. That's a business model.
As for Tesla Inc. (TSLA) CEO Elon Musk's X platform, Krugman didn't hold back. He called blue verification checks a "fraud" and described Musk's reaction to EU fines as "berserk," referring to the billionaire's recent offensive against the European bloc, including calls for its complete abolition.
Countries Fight Back While Tech Complies Reluctantly
Not everyone is rolling over. Australia recently banned children under 16 from using social media accounts, and tech companies have grudgingly complied with the new rules. Even Musk's X eventually fell in line, stating: "It's not our choice – it's what the Australian law requires."
Malaysia is preparing to enforce similar restrictions starting next year, prohibiting children under 16 from creating social media accounts. These moves represent a growing global pushback against the platforms' reach, particularly when it comes to protecting young users.
The market had its own reaction to the ongoing scrutiny. Shares of Meta Platforms (META) were down 1.48% on Tuesday, closing at $656.96, and slipped another 0.42% overnight. The stock scores high on growth and quality metrics but shows an unfavorable price trend across short, medium, and long-term horizons.
Krugman's broader point is that this isn't just about individual companies behaving badly. It's about a fundamental power imbalance where tech billionaires have accumulated enough wealth and influence to override democratic processes, both at home and abroad. Whether you buy the narco-state comparison or not, the underlying question is worth asking: when did we decide that social media companies should have more say in policy than elected officials?