I can relate with your point about corporations breaking the social contract. Historically, lower corporate taxes were justified because businesses genuinely created broad employment and shared prosperity. Today, that link is severed. The most profitable companies are the ones that need the fewest workers, yet they still enjoy the incentives built for a completely different era. Your idea that tax policy needs to catch up to technological reality feels overdue. If we don’t update the foundations of the system, the imbalance between corporate profit and human wellbeing will just keep widening.
Most of the economic policy that countries use to justify their activity, is from an outdated era that didn't consider global corporations and tax systems.