Well, maybe the previous gen cars but Europe doesn't have an outlier in EVs.
Anyway, I don't think that it has anything with regulations or taxes. It's the attitude of Europeans. You can see how European GDPs have fallen short after 2008 but that's not because regulations kicked in in 2008 but because, IMHO, the way they handled the economical crisis.
Also, Europeans have a different understanding of what startup is supposed to do, they appear to think that its computer based high margin small business and Americans appear to believe that its supposed to be a business that should grow extremely fast and doesn't have to have any profit until it captures the market and establishes monopoly.
The American way creates huge wealth but creates a lot of suffering and stagnation once the startup reaches the profit making phase. This is a no-go for the Europeans, its something that the public demands be tackled and its something that EU tries to do with giant tech corporations and that's what makes the American businesses hate EU.
I don't know if European public will accept having american-like wealth concentration at the top. The vibe in Europe is that we should all have a dignified life quality and un USA they are O.K. with having people in extreme poverty at the same street with 40 Billion dollar company HQ. When they are too annoyed by all that poor, their solution ideas are something like "let's move somewhere else", "let's buy a land and create a new city where we don't have these people around" or "let's kick out these people and make them someone else's problem".
Yes, the American way creates huge wealth but I'm not convinced that its an improvement over over European way. Also, don't look just for EU vs USA, take at look at China, Japan and Singapore who also managed to built great wealth or innovation without forcing part of the population in poverty.
Anyway, I don't think that it has anything with regulations or taxes. It's the attitude of Europeans. You can see how European GDPs have fallen short after 2008 but that's not because regulations kicked in in 2008 but because, IMHO, the way they handled the economical crisis.
Also, Europeans have a different understanding of what startup is supposed to do, they appear to think that its computer based high margin small business and Americans appear to believe that its supposed to be a business that should grow extremely fast and doesn't have to have any profit until it captures the market and establishes monopoly.
The American way creates huge wealth but creates a lot of suffering and stagnation once the startup reaches the profit making phase. This is a no-go for the Europeans, its something that the public demands be tackled and its something that EU tries to do with giant tech corporations and that's what makes the American businesses hate EU.
I don't know if European public will accept having american-like wealth concentration at the top. The vibe in Europe is that we should all have a dignified life quality and un USA they are O.K. with having people in extreme poverty at the same street with 40 Billion dollar company HQ. When they are too annoyed by all that poor, their solution ideas are something like "let's move somewhere else", "let's buy a land and create a new city where we don't have these people around" or "let's kick out these people and make them someone else's problem".
Yes, the American way creates huge wealth but I'm not convinced that its an improvement over over European way. Also, don't look just for EU vs USA, take at look at China, Japan and Singapore who also managed to built great wealth or innovation without forcing part of the population in poverty.