The Red Tape Problem
The European Single Market was supposed to make doing business across borders as easy as doing business at home. Thirty years after its creation, the reality for most companies is starkly different. A business registered in Belgium that wants to operate in Spain, sell in Germany, and hire in Poland faces a labyrinth of local regulations, registration requirements, and compliance obligations that can cost tens of thousands of euros and months of precious time.
The EU Inc proposal tackles this head-on with a simple but radical idea: one registration, one corporate form, 27 countries.
The Current Cross-Border Nightmare
To understand what the EU Inc changes, consider what a German company must currently do to establish a permanent presence in Italy:
- Register a branch office (sede secondaria) or establish a subsidiary (SRL)- Appoint a local legal representative- Obtain a local tax identification number- Register with the Italian Chamber of Commerce- Open a local bank account (requiring extensive KYC documentation)- Register for local VAT- Comply with Italian employment law for any local hires- File separate annual accounts with the Italian business register
This process typically takes 8-16 weeks and costs €5,000-15,000 in legal and administrative fees. Multiply this across several countries, and the burden becomes prohibitive for SMEs.
A Eurochambres survey found that 43% of European SMEs that considered expanding to another EU country ultimately abandoned their plans due to administrative complexity. The single market, for these companies, exists only on paper.## How EU Inc Changes Everything### Single Registration
An EU Inc company is registered once, in one member state, through a fully online process. From that moment, it is automatically recognized as a valid legal entity in all 27 member states. No branch registration, no subsidiary formation, no local representative required.
The company can immediately:
- Open bank accounts in any member state- Enter into contracts with local partners and clients- Hire employees (subject to local employment law)- Lease commercial property- Apply for public tenders- Invoice customers with a single VAT number ### Branch vs. Subsidiary: A False Choice Eliminated Under current EU law, companies expanding across borders face a fundamental choice between establishing a branch (an extension of the parent company) or a subsidiary (a separate local entity). Each comes with trade-offs:
Branches are cheaper to establish but expose the parent company to unlimited local liability and can create complex tax situations. Subsidiaries provide legal separation but require full local incorporation, separate accounting, and local governance.
The EU Inc eliminates this false choice. A single EU Inc entity can operate across borders with limited liability in every jurisdiction, standardized accounting, and unified governance — combining the best features of both options without their drawbacks.
The Single Digital Gateway
Central to the EU Inc's cross-border functionality is the Single Digital Gateway, an integrated online platform where companies can:
- Register the company: Complete formation in any member state through a unified online interface- File annual returns: Submit all required filings through a single portal, which distributes them to relevant national authorities- Manage compliance: Track and fulfill regulatory obligations across all countries of operation- Access government services: Interact with tax authorities, social security systems, and regulatory bodies across member states
This gateway builds on the existing Single Digital Gateway Regulation but extends it significantly for EU Inc companies.
Real-World Impact: Three Scenarios### The E-Commerce Business
A Polish e-commerce company selling handmade products across Europe currently manages separate VAT registrations in 7 countries, files returns in 7 different systems, and navigates 7 sets of consumer protection rules. With an EU Inc, it would use a single VAT number through the One-Stop-Shop system, file once through the Single Digital Gateway, and operate under a harmonized set of consumer protection obligations.
The Professional Services Firm
A Dutch consulting firm with consultants working on-site at clients in France, Germany, and Belgium currently needs to navigate posted worker directives, A1 social security certificates, and local tax registrations for each engagement. An EU Inc would simplify cross-border worker deployment while maintaining employee protections.
The Manufacturing Company
A Spanish manufacturer with warehouses in three EU countries and sales in ten currently maintains separate legal entities in each warehouse country. With an EU Inc, it could consolidate these into a single corporate structure, dramatically simplifying supply chain management and financial reporting.
What Remains National
The EU Inc doesn't eliminate all national requirements. Several areas remain under member state competence:
- Employment law: Workers are protected by the employment law of the country where they work, not where the EU Inc is registered- Sector-specific regulations: Industries like banking, insurance, and healthcare maintain national licensing requirements- Real estate: Property registration and transfer taxes follow local rules- Criminal law: Corporate liability for criminal offenses follows national law
However, the EU Inc framework includes a clear delineation between what is harmonized (corporate law, company formation, governance) and what remains national (sectoral regulation, employment law, taxation). This clarity itself is valuable — companies currently spend significant resources simply understanding which rules apply where.
The Economic Impact
The European Commission estimates that cross-border administrative burden costs EU businesses approximately €30 billion annually. Reducing this burden by even 30-40% through the EU Inc would unlock significant economic value, particularly for the 24 million SMEs that form the backbone of the European economy.
For companies ready to embrace cross-border operations, the EU Inc represents a generational opportunity to finally operate as a truly European business — not a national company awkwardly stretching across borders.
Originally published on EU Inc News
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