Finance

Commission wants pan-EU rules for innovative firms to leverage EU single market

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review

Posted on January 25, 2025

3 min read

· Last updated: January 27, 2026

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EU Commission's proposal for pan-EU rules to support innovative firms - Global Banking & Finance Review
This image illustrates the European Commission's initiative to create a unified regulatory framework for innovative firms. The proposal aims to enhance the EU single market, encouraging startups to thrive within Europe instead of relocating to the U.S.
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EU Proposes Pan-European Rules for Innovative Firms

By Jan Strupczewski

BRUSSELS (Reuters) -The European Commission wants to dissuade innovative start-up firms from moving to the U.S. to grow by creating rules that would allow them to easily operate across the 27-nation European Union, the head of the Commission said on Tuesday.

In a speech at the Davos economic forum in Switzerland, Ursula von der Leyen said a special rulebook, independent of often differing national legislation, would allow companies to take advantage of the full scale of the EU's single market of 450 million consumers.

"Today, the European Single Market still has too many national barriers," von der Leyen said. "Sometimes companies are dealing with 27 national legislations."

"We will offer instead to innovative companies to operate all across our Union under one single set of rules. We call it the 28th regime. Corporate law, insolvency, labour law, taxation – one single and simple framework across our Union," she said.

The initiative is part of the EU's efforts to retain innovative firms so that the bloc can stay in the race for technologies of the future which would allow the European economy to stop emitting CO2 and help prevent climate change.

The United States often holds more attraction to young European companies because raising capital in the U.S. is easier than in Europe and because a product developed in one U.S. state can be sold across the whole U.S. with no extra paperwork.

Using the so-called 28th regime would be legal way of bypassing the need for all 27 EU governments to agree on often complex reforms to harmonise their financial, legal and taxation rules.

The 28th regime method has been discussed in the context of various areas of EU activity since 2010, most recently as way forward in a report on how to improve the EU's single market by former Italian Prime Minister Enrico Letta.

But it requires the consent of governments and the European Parliament to launch. Finishing the legal process could take around two years, if not more, and success is not guaranteed.

"EU governments have blocked such 28th regime proposals many times," one senior EU official said. "But maybe now with the urgency you can propose such an omnibus 28th regime."

The Commission estimates there are around 182,000 innovative small and medium sized companies, who could, on a voluntary basis, become part of the 28th regime to get better access to the whole EU single market.

"This would be a complex endeavour," one EU diplomat said. "At the same time, at some point we will have to start considering difficult issues as well. We can't keep saying we need to address competitiveness but maintain our existing positions."

(Reporting by Jan Strupczewski, editing by Ed Osmond)

Key Takeaways

  • The EU plans to introduce a 28th regime for innovative firms.
  • This regime aims to simplify operations across the EU single market.
  • The initiative seeks to prevent firms from moving to the U.S.
  • The proposal requires consent from EU governments and Parliament.
  • The 28th regime could benefit 182,000 small and medium companies.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the main topic?
The article discusses the EU's proposal for a 28th regime to simplify operations for innovative firms across the single market.
Why is the 28th regime important?
It aims to retain innovative firms within Europe by offering a unified legal framework, preventing them from moving to the U.S.
What challenges does the 28th regime face?
The proposal requires approval from all EU governments and the European Parliament, which has been a hurdle in the past.

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