In France, registering a company takes a month and drains around €2,000. Before the start, you are already filling the pockets of the bureaucrats. Does this foster innovation? According to the Draghi report of 2024, overregulation is the weight sinking Europe’s economy. Indeed if entrepreneurs struggle to even register a business, what hope is there for growth?
Compliance and productivity
What is the point of compliance? Safety. But in aging societies, risk aversion tends to strangle innovation. And Europe is getting old. The median age has risen from 29 in the 1950s to 43 today, mirroring the continent’s ever-expanding regulatory framework. Is compliance just the last gasp of a boomer-era obsession with control? Let’s hope so, because according to research by Bruno Pellegrino and Geoffrey Zheng, regulatory policies cost France nearly 4% of its GDP annually: a tremendous amount of €122 billion.
It is then hard to distinguish between good and bad regulations. Indeed, bureaucrats keen to fight VAT fraud may end up banning startups from selling anything if they fail to tick every tax compliance box from day one. Where, then, is the line between safeguarding revenue and suffocating firms? With Musk’s DOGE and Milei’s chainsaw, deregulation has become the rallying cry of the new economic right. Slashing bureaucracy, they argue, is the key to growth. Even France, never one to rush reform, is entertaining the idea with Prime Minister François Bayrou’s pledge to a "strong movement of de-bureaucratisation." After years of regulatory suffocation, the EU is feeling the pressure. Entrepreneurs, investors, and businesses are pushing back, demanding a system that rewards innovation and risk.
If money talks, VC funds have been shouting for decades. Investment flows into low-regulated sectors like tech and consumer services, while heavily regulated ones like healthcare and automotive drown in compliance costs, attracting 30% less funding on average. Europe still sees tech as its saving grace. Projections suggest the sector will grow at 5.1% annually until 2030, fueled by AI, cloud computing, and digitalisation. The big question is whether Brussels will nurture this momentum or strangle it with more paperwork. Because now it’s a fact: deregulation means growth.
Slowing the growth to protect lifestyle
Had the Concorde been designed today, it would never have taken off, too loud, too disruptive, too non-compliant. With EU aviation rules mandating up to 17-decibel noise reductions, supersonic travel has been buried under layers of red tape. It’s a fitting symbol of Europe’s priorities: protecting lifestyle over innovation.
The U.S. fuels R&D through venture capital and corporate behemoths, while China orchestrates state-backed technological leaps. The EU, despite producing world-class research, struggles to turn its innovation into industry. Talent drains to more agile markets like the U.S., where risk is rewarded, not buried in stagnation. As Brussels obsesses over compliance, others race ahead, widening the gap between European research excellence and commercial dominance.
Europe prioritises comfort, security and safety over speed and progress. Training AI supermodels demands vast datasets, but GDPR restrictions leave European start-ups drowning in bureaucracy while U.S. competitors elsewhere forge ahead with the State’s help. In medicine, the EMA is far behind the FDA, forcing EU patients to wait twice as long, while Americans access new treatments first. On January 29th 2025, Brussels pledged a 25% cut in corporate reporting, 35% for small firms, but this is not enough. Deregulation is about cutting laws not only costs. In France, senior managers waste 20% of their time on compliance. Law books keep expanding at an alarming rate. In the end, Europeans are well shielded by regulations, but at what cost? If compliance keeps suffocating businesses, there may soon be no companies left for these procedures to regulate.
EU-DOGE
There is a thin line between security and risk. No one wants medicines approved in a day or personal data indiscriminately fed into AI models. Total deregulation would shock most Europeans, but excessive compliance crushes risk-taking and creativity. The Baltic states offer a compelling alternative: Estonia’s e-Residency program simplifies company formation for global entrepreneurs, while its zero-tax on reinvested profits encourages long-term business growth. Lithuania’s flat 15% corporate tax and Latvia’s 20% on distributed profits demonstrate how straightforward taxes can drive investment too. Rather than drowning startups in paperwork, the EU should scale compliance based on risk, rigorous oversight for high-impact industries like nuclear energy, but a light touch for small businesses. No need for law for every single process; business needs room to breathe.
Statement
Europe prides itself on safeguarding consumers, ensuring stability, and enforcing compliance. Yet, the very regulations designed to protect may be strangling the innovation they claim to nurture. Startups drown in bureaucracy, AI research is shackled by GDPR, and drug approvals lag behind the U.S., leaving patients waiting. Meanwhile, Baltic nations thrive on streamlined e-governance and flat taxes, proving efficiency doesn’t mean chaos. The question whether Europe can regulate so without suffocating its own future.