Germany approves financial reforms to help its tech industry compete with SV(cnbc.com)
cnbc.com
Germany approves financial reforms to help its tech industry compete with SV
https://www.cnbc.com/2023/11/17/germany-approves-financial-reforms-to-boost-its-tech-industry.html
24 comments
How about decreasing taxes by a far margin? I used to work as a freelance contractor and I had to put aside 50 cent on the euro because I knew I would get taxed to hell next fiscal year.
But then how would they pay for the free* healthcare and such?
The larger problem Germany and other European countries have is over regulation. Startups are like brand new babies... easily suffocated by government and bureaucracy.
I've seen a lott of EU tech startups over the years, and in litterally 0 cases regulation was a concern.
It seems you're not aware of the distinct challenges startups face in Europe. Are you familiar with the GDPR? This regulation alone doubles the complexity of developing a startup. Beyond that, the European Union presents unique hurdles with its diverse languages and varying laws across member countries, adding significant complexity to the entrepreneurial landscape and impacting a founder's journey at multiple levels. Moreover, countries like Germany feature some of the most complicated tax systems in the world, further amplifying the complexity and challenges for entrepreneurs navigating the startup landscape in Europe.
I'm extremely skeptical of your comment. How does GDPR double the complexity of developing a startup, can you explain this clearly? And honestly, a startup is not going to be targeting more than one or two regions in the EU in the beginning, and even as it scales it generally won't target every single region, so I don't see how this also adds complexity too, especially at the beginning when the company is scaling.
By the way, I recently had the experience of remotely setting up a corporation in the United States, and it took just 2 hours. In stark contrast, establishing a GmbH in Germany, a member state of the EU, is a much lengthier process, often taking at least 4-6 weeks. The contrast in efficiency and time commitment is quite striking.
Startups must navigate GDPR's complex requirements, such as managing user consents for data collection, which complicates both user interface and backend development. The focus on data minimization under GDPR requires careful system planning, limiting how data can be used. Furthermore, systems must accommodate user rights, including data access and deletion requests. Global operations face additional legal and technical hurdles due to international data transfer rules. GDPR compliance is a continuous process, demanding regular updates and documentation, diverting attention from other development areas. The need for thorough privacy compliance testing adds to the development lifecycle. These requirements make software development more costly and time-consuming, particularly compared to countries without such strict regulations. Of course, there are many other issues with GDPR, but delving into all of them would be akin to writing a book.
This sounds like it was made by ChatGPT.
Yeah, no. For a small company its not really that complicated and it's also uniform. You can use a simple service for things like cookies and then manually comply in the backend.
Reading GDPR is less complicated than finding out precisely what unregulated in most states means.
Reading GDPR is less complicated than finding out precisely what unregulated in most states means.
How many didn't you see because they got strangled in the crib by regulation?
I saw very many from near conception when they were applying for very first funding.
Don't get me wrong, regulation is a serious topic, but for startups outside of specific domains such as healthcare, it is not realy a thing that seems to stop people from entrepreneurship.
Part of that is certainly that startups just don't care that much and have a we'll worry about that once we are making our first 10 million arr attitude.
Don't get me wrong, regulation is a serious topic, but for startups outside of specific domains such as healthcare, it is not realy a thing that seems to stop people from entrepreneurship.
Part of that is certainly that startups just don't care that much and have a we'll worry about that once we are making our first 10 million arr attitude.
Why dodge the question?
The ones that got to the point of applying for the first funding are the survivors in the survivorship bias.
The ones that got to the point of applying for the first funding are the survivors in the survivorship bias.
Given that these applications could occur before a company was even legally founded, I doubt much 'survival' before that point was necessary.
Really? You don't think prospective businessmen think "I'd like to do this, but those regulations make it stupid to even try?"
You can add at least 1 prospective company to that number. Mine.
I wanted to do something, but the costs of compliance were so high it would be stupid of me to even try.
You can add at least 1 prospective company to that number. Mine.
I wanted to do something, but the costs of compliance were so high it would be stupid of me to even try.
So, from you experience, what were the main show stoppers for the startups that you had the chance to see/observe?
Building things that nobody was waiting for without a sound businessplan. Grossly underestimating required technical knowledge and investment being a close second.
No worries. More of that coming soon. CRA and NIS2 are right there around the corner.
With probably even more coming later ;) No such thing as too much, right?
I wouldn't be angry if not for the fact that I know how inefficient most processes are gonna be. Government processes have no incentives to be fast, so simple things easily can take months.
I wouldn't be angry if not for the fact that I know how inefficient most processes are gonna be. Government processes have no incentives to be fast, so simple things easily can take months.
Why? This won't do much, and maybe you shouldn't try to compete with everyone at all times.
They clean up on automobiles, heavy industry, trains - they should do more of that instead. This almost certainly won't work out, there are larger cultural blockers - can't just fire people, can't have people "sort of" working for your company, etc
They clean up on automobiles, heavy industry, trains - they should do more of that instead. This almost certainly won't work out, there are larger cultural blockers - can't just fire people, can't have people "sort of" working for your company, etc
It is interesting how tech has become "SaaS apps".
Now all we need is reserve currency status.
Why is there any limit at all here? Is there such a limit in the US?