OpenAI's European Expansion Is a Lobbying Campaign Dressed as Economic Policy
The 'EU Economic Blueprint 2.0' contains some reasonable proposals, but let's be precise about what this actually is: regulatory capture with better marketing.
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OpenAI's newly released EU Economic Blueprint 2.0 is, to be precise, not an economic blueprint at all. It is a lobbying document designed to shape European AI regulation in ways that benefit OpenAI specifically, wrapped in the language of partnership and mutual benefit. This does not mean every proposal in it is bad. Some are reasonable. But we should be clear-eyed about what we are reading.
The OpenAI Blog announcement frames this as OpenAI helping Europe "seize the promise of artificial intelligence" and ensuring AI is "developed and deployed by Europe, in Europe, for Europe." The rhetoric is telling. A San Francisco company with no major research operations in the EU is positioning itself as Europe's AI partner. This is not inherently problematic, but it is worth noting that the framing obscures a fundamental tension: OpenAI's commercial interests and Europe's regulatory interests are not always aligned.
The document, which OpenAI describes as containing "new data, partnerships, and initiatives," focuses on three broad areas: accelerating AI adoption, developing AI skills across the workforce, and driving economic growth. These are, I should acknowledge, reasonable goals. No one disputes that Europe has lagged behind the US and China in AI deployment.
But the specifics matter. It's worth noting that OpenAI has simultaneously joined the EU Code of Practice on AI, which the company frames as demonstrating its commitment to "responsible AI" while "partnering with European governments to drive innovation, infrastructure, and economic growth." The juxtaposition is revealing. OpenAI wants to be both the regulated entity and the partner shaping the regulatory environment.
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This is not unique to OpenAI. Microsoft, Google, and Anthropic all engage in similar activities. But OpenAI has been particularly aggressive in recent months. The company announced a strategic partnership with the UK Government in March, framed as a collaboration to "boost AI adoption, drive economic growth, and enhance public services." A similar blueprint was released for Australia in partnership with Mandala Partners. The pattern is consistent: position the company as a quasi-governmental partner rather than a commercial entity subject to regulation.
Here is where I become, perhaps predictably, pedantic. OpenAI's economic claims in these blueprints deserve scrutiny that they rarely receive. When a company claims its technology will drive "sustainable economic growth," we should ask: based on what evidence? What methodology? What assumptions?
The honest answer is that we do not know yet. The macroeconomic effects of large language models remain genuinely unclear. Some economists project significant productivity gains; others argue the effects will be modest and concentrated in specific sectors. The research is early, sample sizes are small, and most studies have not been replicated. OpenAI's blueprints cite optimistic projections without adequately acknowledging this uncertainty.
I know I'm being picky here, but this matters. Policy documents that present contested economic claims as settled facts are not neutral. They are advocacy.
OpenAI has grown substantially. The company's own leadership updates from March 2025 note that it now delivers "products used by hundreds of millions of people" while remaining "focused on the same core" of frontier AI research. This growth creates new regulatory exposure. A research lab can operate with minimal government engagement. A company with hundreds of millions of users cannot.
The EU AI Act is now in force. Implementation details are being negotiated. Companies that participate in shaping those details gain advantages over competitors who do not. OpenAI's blueprint is, in this context, a strategic document aimed at influencing how the Act is interpreted and enforced.
This is, actually, the research shows, a well-documented pattern in technology regulation. Incumbents with resources to engage in regulatory processes tend to shape rules in ways that benefit themselves, sometimes at the expense of smaller competitors or the public interest. The academic literature on regulatory capture is extensive. I am not claiming OpenAI is engaged in capture in any formal sense. But the dynamics are worth watching.
Let me be clear about what I am not arguing. I am not arguing that OpenAI should be excluded from European policy discussions. I am not arguing that all AI regulation is good or that the EU AI Act is perfect. I am arguing that we should read corporate policy documents as what they are: advocacy for corporate interests.
Genuinely new would be OpenAI committing to specific, measurable, independently verifiable outcomes. Not "drive economic growth" but "we will publish quarterly reports on European AI adoption metrics, audited by an independent third party." Not "ensure AI is developed by Europe" but "we will open a research lab in the EU with at least X researchers and publish Y papers annually." Not "skills development" but "we will fund Z training programmes with measurable outcomes tracked over five years."
The current blueprint contains none of this. It contains, sort of, aspirational language and vague commitments. This is not unusual for corporate policy documents. But it is worth naming.
Several things remain unclear, and I want to be honest about the limits of what we can conclude from public documents.
First, what specific regulatory outcomes is OpenAI seeking? The blueprint's language is general enough to support multiple interpretations. Without access to OpenAI's private communications with EU officials, we cannot know what specific provisions the company is lobbying for or against.
Second, how do OpenAI's proposals compare to those of competitors? Anthropic, Google DeepMind, and Meta all have European interests. Their positions may align or conflict with OpenAI's. The competitive dynamics here are not transparent.
Third, what do independent European AI researchers think? I found limited public commentary from academic researchers on the blueprint specifically. This is a gap in my analysis. Corporate documents receive extensive coverage; independent expert assessment receives less.
If I were advising European policymakers (I am not, and they have not asked), I would suggest three things.
One: require specificity. When companies propose "partnerships" and "initiatives," ask for concrete commitments with measurable outcomes and enforcement mechanisms. Vague language benefits the company, not the public.
Two: diversify input. OpenAI is one voice. European AI researchers, civil society organisations, smaller AI companies, and affected workers should have comparable access to policymakers. The company with the largest lobbying budget should not have the loudest voice.
Three: track outcomes. If OpenAI's blueprint claims are correct, we should see measurable economic benefits from AI adoption in Europe over the next five years. If those benefits do not materialise, that should inform future policy. Too often, corporate projections are accepted without subsequent accountability.
I recognise this is, in a way, an unsatisfying conclusion. I have not proven that OpenAI's blueprint is harmful. I have argued that it should be read critically, as advocacy rather than analysis. This is less dramatic than claiming corruption or capture. But it is, I think, the accurate assessment based on available evidence.
OpenAI is a company pursuing its interests through legitimate political channels. That is neither surprising nor inherently wrong. But when corporate interests are dressed in the language of public benefit, we should notice the costume.