That's a red herring question that's impossible to answer.
The point is not that Meta and other companies break laws. It's that they keep breaking the same ones related to privacy. They do this because their business model depends on exploiting their users' data. Privacy laws to them are a nuisance that directly impact their revenue, so if they calculate that the revenue from their activity is greater than the fines, then it's just the cost of doing business. If, OTOH, it turns out that the amount of resources they would need to expend on fines or to comply with the laws are greater than the possible revenue, i.e. the juice is not worth the squeeze, then they simply bail out and stop doing business in that jurisdiction. But so far, even billion-dollar fines are clearly lower than their revenues.
It's a simple numbers game, so I'm not sure what your argument is.