UK says Amazon and Microsoft’s cloud dominance is undermining competition

Image Credits: UnsplashImage Credits: Unsplash

Amazon and Microsoft have long been leaders in global cloud infrastructure, but the UK’s competition regulator says their dominance is now stifling fair competition. A new report from the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) warns that these two tech giants hold as much as 70–80% of the country’s public cloud market—an outsized share that may be hardening into structural lock-in. The CMA isn’t just worried about pricing or consumer harm. It’s worried about control.

And it’s not the only one. Across Europe, regulators are waking up to the strategic dependencies that have formed around hyperscale cloud services. What’s at stake is not just a competitive playing field, but the very foundations of national digital infrastructure.

While AWS and Azure’s technical leadership is undisputed, what alarms regulators is how that leadership is being maintained. The CMA has flagged several tactics that effectively discourage customers from switching providers. These include data egress fees (which make moving data out of a platform expensive), long-term contracts with minimum spend requirements, and limited interoperability between services.

These aren’t glitches. They’re features. Amazon and Microsoft have built their cloud businesses around deep ecosystem integration. Once a company—or a public agency—adopts a set of tools and workflows, moving to a competitor becomes costly, time-consuming, and potentially risky. The more they grow, the more unavoidable they become.

The CMA’s framing—“harm to competition”—undersells the issue. The real concern is about platform entrenchment: a condition where the cloud market begins to resemble a utility, but without the accountability or access rules that usually come with such status.

There are two reasons the UK is taking this step now. First, cloud usage has surged in both the private and public sectors, especially post-COVID. Government services, NHS data, education platforms—all increasingly depend on cloud infrastructure. Second, digital sovereignty has become a live issue. After Brexit, the UK has fewer joint industrial initiatives to rely on compared to the EU, which is pursuing regional alternatives like GAIA-X.

In this context, reliance on US cloud providers takes on a geopolitical dimension. It’s no longer just a matter of who’s cheapest or fastest. It’s about who controls the infrastructure through which public and economic life flows.

The CMA inquiry indirectly highlights the UK’s cloud gap: there is no homegrown cloud provider with anything close to AWS or Azure’s capabilities. Even the third-largest player, Google Cloud, holds a distant market share. That means competition in the UK cloud market is largely limited to two US firms with global scale advantages—and no serious domestic challenger in sight.

Smaller cloud providers face steep barriers to entry. They can’t match the scale, global data center footprint, or developer ecosystems of the market leaders. And they’re often forced to integrate with the very platforms they hope to displace, further diluting their independence.

This is why structural remedies—like mandating interoperability standards or banning punitive egress fees—are being seriously considered. But such moves could take years to implement and enforce, by which time the market may be even more consolidated.

For cloud customers, especially in sectors with compliance or national interest stakes, this inquiry is a warning. As convenience locks in complexity, and complexity locks in dependence, switching providers becomes less an IT choice and more a policy decision. Operators and executives should start modeling their exposure—not just in spend, but in capability dependencies and supplier resilience.

For other governments and regulators, the UK’s actions may be a blueprint—or at least a provocation. Australia, Canada, and the Gulf states face similar cloud concentration dynamics. Without coordinated regulation or the development of regional champions, most markets risk sleepwalking into architectural dependence.

This isn’t about breaking up tech giants or regulating pricing. It’s about reframing cloud infrastructure as critical infrastructure. The CMA’s provisional findings push the conversation toward viewing cloud services not as a commercial utility, but as a strategic domain requiring oversight, redundancy, and long-term resilience.

Amazon and Microsoft aren’t just vendors in this scenario—they’re de facto infrastructure custodians. And that changes the calculus for national policy.

The UK cloud market inquiry reveals something deeper than regulatory concern. It signals a shift in how countries perceive digital infrastructure and its custodians. When two American companies control most of the cloud terrain—through both scale and architecture—it creates a long-tail dependency that is hard to unwind.

This isn’t about tech envy or protectionism. It’s about platform concentration becoming policy risk. If switching becomes technically and financially unviable, then competition is no longer real. It’s performative. And that’s the line regulators are now preparing to redraw.


Financial Planning
Image Credits: Unsplash
Financial PlanningAugust 2, 2025 at 1:30:00 AM

How pre-K and career advancement for parents are connected

For millions of working parents, the preschool years are less about early childhood enrichment and more about one stark question: how do I...

Luxury
Image Credits: Unsplash
LuxuryAugust 2, 2025 at 1:00:00 AM

How luxury lost its edge—and the moves that could win customers back

Luxury used to command reverence. It was slow, scarce, and wrapped in ritual. Today, it’s everywhere—scrollable, hashtagged, and often indistinguishable from its knockoff...

Careers Malaysia
Image Credits: Unsplash
CareersAugust 1, 2025 at 5:00:00 PM

What Malaysia’s Employment Insurance System really covers—and who qualifies

Losing your job is always hard. But in a country like Malaysia, where workers don’t receive traditional unemployment handouts, the financial and emotional...

Economy
Image Credits: Unsplash
EconomyAugust 1, 2025 at 3:00:00 PM

Asia must harness AI for natural disaster management

Wednesday’s tsunami warnings triggered by a deep-sea earthquake off Russia’s Kamchatka Peninsula were not just seismological events. They were institutional ones. As alerts...

Economy
Image Credits: Unsplash
EconomyAugust 1, 2025 at 1:00:00 PM

What it will take for Hong Kong to lead in shipping again

The Development Bureau’s proposal to reclaim 301 hectares—145 near Lung Kwu Tan and 45 in Tuen Mun West—for a “smart and green industrial...

Economy
Image Credits: Unsplash
EconomyAugust 1, 2025 at 1:00:00 PM

Taiwan welcomes reduced 20% US tariff—but faces growing pressure to offer deeper concessions

Taiwan has just been handed a partial reprieve: the United States will impose a 20% tariff on its exports instead of the previously...

Economy Singapore
Image Credits: Unsplash
EconomyAugust 1, 2025 at 1:00:00 PM

Singapore stock market sell-off reveals deeper crisis of confidence

While headlines focused on the 1.1 percent drop in the Straits Times Index (STI) on July 31, a closer reading of the market...

Economy Singapore
Image Credits: Unsplash
EconomyAugust 1, 2025 at 1:00:00 PM

Trump adjusts reciprocal tariffs ahead of deadline; Singapore expected to retain 10% rate

President Donald Trump’s 2025 tariff overhaul is not a symbolic gesture. It’s a structural realignment that reintroduces trade friction as a core feature...

Politics Middle East
Image Credits: Unsplash
PoliticsAugust 1, 2025 at 1:00:00 PM

Steve Witkoff, U.S. Envoy, will travel to Gaza as Trump, under pressure, looks for an aid plan

The appointment of Steve Witkoff—a New York real estate developer and longtime ally of Donald Trump—as a special envoy to Gaza marks a...

Tech Malaysia
Image Credits: Unsplash
TechAugust 1, 2025 at 1:00:00 PM

US lowers tariff on Malaysian goods to 19% from 25%

The announcement landed without the usual political fanfare. On August 1, the United States quietly reduced its import tariff on all Malaysian goods...

Economy
Image Credits: Unsplash
EconomyAugust 1, 2025 at 11:30:00 AM

U.S. expands tariff hikes to dozens of countries

While headlines often zoom in on US–China friction, the more consequential pivot may be Washington’s decision to raise tariffs across a wider swath...

Economy
Image Credits: Unsplash
EconomyAugust 1, 2025 at 11:30:00 AM

Hong Kong stocks head for first weekly decline in a month amid China growth concerns

Hong Kong stocks just broke their three-week winning streak. On the surface, it’s a mild pullback: the Hang Seng dipped 2.4% for the...

Load More