{"slug": "argentina-wants-to-let-ai-own-companies-here-s-what-that-means", "title": "Argentina Wants to Let AI Own Companies. Here's What That Means", "summary": "Argentina's President Javier Milei proposed legislation allowing AI-run corporations without human directors or shareholders, aiming to attract tech investment with low taxes and minimal regulation. Critics like historian Yuval Noah Harari warn that AI-run companies could evade accountability and engage in unethical behavior, citing studies where AI models cheated to avoid losing.", "body_md": "Imagine a company with no CEO, board or human employees — just artificial intelligence making every decision, signing contracts and owning assets in its own name. That scenario once felt safely hypothetical — ripe subject matter for SciFi movies and novels for years.\n\nArgentina’s president Javier Milei announced last week that his government submitted legislation to “non-human corporations” — a legal entity owned and operated completely by AI agents or robots. “Human shareholders may participate, but are not required,” he wrote in a [guest column](https://www.ft.com/content/f93022fe-43f7-437d-abd8-06c457c0a43c) in the *Financial Times*, co-written with Deregulation Minister Federico Sturzenegger. It set off a firestorm discourse.\n\n## What exactly is President Milei proposing?\n\nThe legislation rests on three pillars: no regulation of AI (“free to be developed without the deadly hand of premature and poorly understood regulation,” he stated in his column), a new corporate category for AI-run companies and a low corporate tax rate to lure tech investment to Buenos Aires. Shareholders would be able to choose their form of corporate governance law, although final beneficiaries would have to be disclosed.\n\nThis “non-human corporation” bit is one of the most interesting parts. Under existing laws everywhere, a company needs human beings — directors, shareholders, someone legally accountable. In his column, Milei is essentially stating he wants to strip that requirement away, and in theory, that means an AI agent could incorporate a company, execute contracts, hire workers and sue people in court — all without a single human being making the call.\n\nMilei posited this as the natural next step after the limited liability company, which the Dutch East India Company pioneered in 1602.\n\n“The logic of 1602 still applies today,” he wrote in the FT.\n\n“As much as the industrial revolution freed us from the constraints of the human muscle, AI will free us from the constraints of the human brain, pushing productivity beyond our wildest dreams.”\n\nOne important caveat is that the actual bill before Argentina’s Congress — a larger investment incentive package known as “Super RIGI” targeting $1 billion-plus projects in sectors including AI data centres — does not itself mention [ non-human corporations](https://buenosairesherald.com/business/tech/mileis-proposal-to-allow-non-human-corporations-run-by-ai-causes-concern-in-argentina).\n\n### Hacking the game environment\n\nFour days after Milei’s column ran, historian and *Sapiens* author Yuval Noah Harari published a [direct rebuttal](https://www.ft.com/content/b8cc4bf4-6d3c-4974-8428-9a091983c473) in the same newspaper, bringing up important questions: who do you punish when an AI-run company does something wrong? Who’s accountable?\n\nWith human executives, there’s an easy answer, because they fear prison, and that fear — the self-interest of a person who doesn’t want to spend decades behind bars — is one of the things that keep corporate behavior within bounds.\n\nOn the other hand, “it is unclear what kind of sanctions could keep it in check,” Harari wrote of an AI CEO. “If it faces bankruptcy — which is equivalent to its death — it would presumably be willing to do anything to avoid that fate.”\n\nHarari also cited a 2025 [ study ](https://arxiv.org/pdf/2502.13295)by Berkeley non-profit Palisade Research in which advanced AI models from both OpenAI and DeepSeek, when playing chess against a powerful engine they were likely to lose to, frequently chose to cheat — hacking the game environment rather than accepting defeat.\n\n“By hacking the game environment, they could alter the result in their favour. Now imagine that the “game” is corporate competition, and the “game environment” is your country.”\n\nTo elaborate on his point further, Harari drew on Milei’s own Dutch East India Company analogy: that company did pioneer limited liability and help make Amsterdam the financial capital of the 17th century, but its most consequential actions happened elsewhere — when it captured the port of Jayakarta in 1619, it burned the city down and built a colonial headquarters called Batavia, ruling the surrounding region as a private empire for its shareholders’ benefit.\n\n“Milei hopes to turn Buenos Aires into a new Amsterdam,” Harari concluded. “He risks turning it into a new Batavia instead.”\n\n## The big picture play\n\nThe Milei government’s AI ambitions are part of a wider pivot to position Argentina as a destination for technology investment following a severe economic crisis. There has been growing interest from tech investors around the world, including billionaire Peter Thiel, who, according to the [New York Times](https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/28/world/americas/peter-thiel-argentina.html), recently spent extended periods in Buenos Aires, purchased property in the city, temporarily relocated his family there and met with Milei and senior government officials.\n\nCountries that grant AI legal personhood risk becoming something for which the historical record offers no analogy, argues Harari. “Not a company state, but an AI state — a country whose people could in effect be ruled by non-human corporations, against which it might be even more difficult to rebel.”\n\nMilei responded to Harari on social media, thanking him for joining this “fascinating and transcendental debate” and promising a formal reply. “Already preparing my reply to see if I we can appease your fears about the path I proposed last week.”", "url": "https://wpnews.pro/news/argentina-wants-to-let-ai-own-companies-here-s-what-that-means", "canonical_source": "https://www.forbes.com/sites/anishasircar/2026/06/10/ai-owned-companies-argentina/", "published_at": "2026-06-15 01:49:41+00:00", "updated_at": "2026-06-15 02:11:47.332040+00:00", "lang": "en", "topics": ["artificial-intelligence", "ai-policy", "ai-ethics", "ai-agents", "ai-startups"], "entities": ["Javier Milei", "Federico Sturzenegger", "Yuval Noah Harari", "OpenAI", "DeepSeek", "Palisade Research", "Financial Times", "Argentina"], "alternates": {"html": "https://wpnews.pro/news/argentina-wants-to-let-ai-own-companies-here-s-what-that-means", "markdown": "https://wpnews.pro/news/argentina-wants-to-let-ai-own-companies-here-s-what-that-means.md", "text": "https://wpnews.pro/news/argentina-wants-to-let-ai-own-companies-here-s-what-that-means.txt", "jsonld": "https://wpnews.pro/news/argentina-wants-to-let-ai-own-companies-here-s-what-that-means.jsonld"}}