Despite the EU attempts to stimulate entrepreneurship, EU citizens remain less inclined to become entrepreneurs and more risk-averse than their US counterparts. Moreover, once a new company has been created, it tends to grow at a slower rate than in the US, and there are around twice as many failures in Europe.
In a debate hosted by Microsoft during the third annual SME day in Brussels on 5 June, experts including entrepreneurs, academics and policymakers concluded that Europe must undergo a series of key policy changes in order to develop entrepreneurial spirit and facilitate the growth of SMEs:
- Increase labour flexibility;
- dramatically increase funding of basic science research in universities;
- open borders to immigration;
- reform early-stage education to nurture the entrepreneurial minds of the youth;
- create a European patent, and;
- reform the capital-tax system in order to get more people to invest in initial public offerings (IPOs) of private companies' first public stock sales.




