AI Acquihires: Competition Risks, Talent Battles and Economic Spillovers

AI Acquihires: Competition Risks, Talent Battles and Economic Spillovers

Antitrust agencies are increasingly confronted with “acquihires” of AI start-ups — yet most cases so far have been waved through under the banner of “uncertainty.” A decade ago, similar caution around platform acquisitions helped cement dominant digital ecosystems. Are we repeating the same mistake? Should AI acquihires be seen as a new form of (reverse) killer acquisition, removing future rivals by absorbing key talent? Beyond competition policy, the stakes may be even broader. Compared with past industrial revolutions, the AI boom is generating fewer new jobs, while acquihires intensify the battle for a small pool of exceptionally productive workers. What are the consequences for innovation, labour markets, and spillovers to the wider economy? Join us for a high-level discussion with leading voices from academia and policy: Fireside with Jonathan Kanter (Carnegie Mellon & WashU; former DOJ Assistant Attorney General, 2021–24), moderated by Cristina Caffarra (University College London) Open panel discussion moderated by Florian Ederer (BU and CEPR) with Luis Garicano (London School of Economics and CEPR) Igor Letina (University of Bern and CEPR; Swiss Competition Commission) Ioana Marinescu (University of Pennsylvania; former Principal Economist, DOJ, 2021–24) Hans Zenger (Chief Economist Team of DG Competition, European Commission)