Corporations are frequently accused of moral indifference. Critics often portray large firms as institutions that pursue profit while ignoring the consequences of their actions. Such criticism rests on a simplistic view of how businesses actually behave. In practice, many corporations demonstrate that economic incentives do not eliminate moral judgment. The recent dispute between the United States government and the artificial intelligence company Anthropic illustrates this point clearly.
Anthropic has reportedly been designated a supply-chain risk by the United States Department of Defense because the company has refused to allow its technologies to be used for certain military applications, including mass surveillance systems and autonomous weaponry. From a narrow commercial perspective, cooperation with the government could offer lucrative contracts and long-term revenue streams. Yet the company has chosen to limit how its systems may be deployed, reflecting concerns about mortality, accountability, and the ethical consequences of artificial intelligence in warfare. Far from confirming the caricature of corporations as purely amoral actors, the episode shows that firms sometimes impose constraints on themselves even when profits might argue otherwise.
A similar dynamic can be observed in recent litigation over American trade policy. The company Learning Resources Inc. challenged tariffs imposed under presidential authority, arguing that the measures exceeded the limits of executive power. The dispute ultimately reached the Supreme Court of the United States, which ruled that the International Emergency Economic Powers Act does not authorize the president to impose tariffs on imported goods. The decision could unlock as much as $175 billion in refunds for businesses that had paid the contested duties.
At the heart of the ruling lies the constitutional principle of separation of powers. The authority to impose taxes, including tariffs, belongs to Congress rather than the executive branch. Taxation requires explicit legislative authorization, and that power cannot be assumed by the president through emergency statutes designed for other purposes. By limiting the scope of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, the Court reaffirmed that fiscal authority remains firmly within the legislative domain.
These controversies raise a broader concern about the trajectory of American economic governance. Increasingly, there are signs that the United States risks adopting practices long associated with authoritarian systems, particularly the close integration of state power and private enterprise found in the People’s Republic of China. In that system, businesses are not merely economic actors but instruments of political strategy.
Within China’s technology sector, the Chinese Communist Party has developed multiple mechanisms to maintain control over major firms. One important method involves the installation of party organizations inside private companies. These internal party cells allow the state to scrutinize business decisions and ensure that corporate strategy remains aligned with political priorities. In practice, such structures blur the distinction between commercial management and party supervision.
Another mechanism is the acquisition of so-called “golden shares” in technology companies. These small but strategically significant equity stakes grant the state special governance rights, including influence over board decisions and editorial control in media or platform companies. Even a minor shareholding can therefore translate into disproportionate political authority within nominally private firms.
The experience of Alibaba illuminates how these tools operate alongside more direct forms of political pressure. After the company’s founder Jack Ma publicly criticized financial regulators, Chinese authorities launched a sweeping regulatory crackdown on the technology sector. Ant Group’s anticipated public offering was halted, new regulatory investigations were opened, and the company was forced to restructure key parts of its financial operations. The episode demonstrated that the Chinese state expects large corporations not merely to comply with regulations but to remain politically subordinate.
Such measures reveal a model in which economic power is tolerated only insofar as it serves state objectives. Private enterprise exists, but autonomy remains conditional. Businesses can grow rapidly, accumulate capital, and innovate technologically, yet ultimate authority rests with the party.
For this reason, recent tensions between American companies and the federal government deserve careful attention. When firms are penalized or blacklisted because they refuse to adapt their technologies for surveillance or weaponization, the line between democratic governance and strategic economic control begins to blur. A system in which the state pressures corporations to serve geopolitical objectives risks drifting toward the same patterns that characterize China’s political economy.
From this perspective, the position taken by companies such as Anthropic reflects a broader principle. Engineers, researchers, and entrepreneurs should not regard themselves as mere instruments of state power. Scientific and technological progress depends on intellectual independence. When innovators are compelled to serve political directives regardless of ethical consequences, the result is not only a moral failure but also a threat to the creative freedom that drives discovery.
The alternative model, visible in the close alignment between government and business in China, places political control above entrepreneurial autonomy. When companies exist primarily to serve strategic objectives, scientists and engineers lose the freedom to determine how their discoveries are used. Innovation continues, but it occurs within boundaries defined by political authority rather than by independent judgment.
Modern economies therefore face a fundamental choice. Technological progress can unfold within a framework that respects legal limits, corporate autonomy, and the ethical responsibility of scientists. Alternatively, innovation can be subordinated to the strategic goals of the state. The tensions surrounding artificial intelligence, trade policy, and global competition suggest that this choice is becoming increasingly significant for the future of technological development.