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The Headless Firm: How AI Reshapes Enterprise Boundaries

arXiv:2602.21401v1h-index: 2
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses organizational design and economic implications for firms and labor markets, offering a novel theoretical model with specific predictions.

The paper tackles the problem of how agentic AI changes coordination costs in enterprises, predicting a shift to a 'Headless Firm' structure with constant marginal costs for adding execution providers and stable coordination cost-to-throughput ratios as ecosystems grow.

The boundary of the firm is determined by coordination cost. We argue that agentic AI induces a structural change in how coordination costs scale: in prior modular systems, integration cost grew with interaction topology (O(n^2) in the number of components); in protocol-mediated agentic systems, integration cost collapses to O(n) while verification scales with task throughput rather than interaction count. This shift selects for a specific organizational equilibrium -- the Headless Firm -- structured as an hourglass: a personalized generative interface at the top, a standardized protocol waist in the middle, and a competitive market of micro-specialized execution agents at the bottom. We formalize this claim as a coordination cost model with two falsifiable empirical predictions: (1) the marginal cost of adding an execution provider should be approximately constant in a mature hourglass ecosystem; (2) the ratio of total coordination cost to task throughput should remain stable as ecosystem size grows. We derive conditions for hourglass stability versus re-centralization and analyze implications for firm size distributions, labor markets, and software economics. The analysis predicts a domain-conditional Great Unbundling: in high knowledge-velocity domains, firm size distributions shift mass from large integrated incumbents toward micro-specialized agents and thin protocol orchestrators.

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