EconWorks Podcast

The Subsidy Paradox — Why Cursor Sold to SpaceX

19 min · 19. juni 2026
episode The Subsidy Paradox — Why Cursor Sold to SpaceX cover

Description

We break down the economic structure of the AI developer market in this episode. We discuss how dependence on upstream foundation models compels downstream innovators to flow both capital and highly refined telemetry back to their vertically integrated competitors. We objectively evaluate the proposed solution, the acquisition of Cursor by SpaceX/xAI. Is the deal a classic case of vertical foreclosure that will harm competition or a necessary defensive merger that ends a data monopoly? We walk through the specific efficiencies of the deal, including cost reduction, performance optimization, and the removal of the innovation barriers. Read the full article and graphic analysis: https://blog.econworks.com/p/the-subsidy-paradox-why-cursor-sold?r=562wri [https://blog.econworks.com/p/the-subsidy-paradox-why-cursor-sold?r=562wri] Explore more visual economics content: https://econworks.com YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@EconWorks-d3e Substack: https://blog.econworks.com [https://blog.econworks.com] This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit blog.econworks.com/subscribe [https://blog.econworks.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

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41 episodes

episode The Subsidy Paradox — Why Cursor Sold to SpaceX artwork

The Subsidy Paradox — Why Cursor Sold to SpaceX

We break down the economic structure of the AI developer market in this episode. We discuss how dependence on upstream foundation models compels downstream innovators to flow both capital and highly refined telemetry back to their vertically integrated competitors. We objectively evaluate the proposed solution, the acquisition of Cursor by SpaceX/xAI. Is the deal a classic case of vertical foreclosure that will harm competition or a necessary defensive merger that ends a data monopoly? We walk through the specific efficiencies of the deal, including cost reduction, performance optimization, and the removal of the innovation barriers. Read the full article and graphic analysis: https://blog.econworks.com/p/the-subsidy-paradox-why-cursor-sold?r=562wri [https://blog.econworks.com/p/the-subsidy-paradox-why-cursor-sold?r=562wri] Explore more visual economics content: https://econworks.com YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@EconWorks-d3e Substack: https://blog.econworks.com [https://blog.econworks.com] This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit blog.econworks.com/subscribe [https://blog.econworks.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

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