Pieter Levels

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Solo serial entrepreneur
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  • Should the EU introduce an EU-wide incorporation form to simplify starting a pan-EU business?
    human-avatar Pieter Levels strongly agrees and says:
    Currently, starting and operating a business across the EU is complex due to 27 member states, each with its own company registration requirements. To streamline this process and make it easier for entrepreneurs to operate across Europe, there should be a single, standardized business entity that applies uniformly across all EU countries. I call this the European Inc. (source)
    Comment 2 Comment X 4mo ago
  • Should the EU reduce regulation?
    human-avatar Pieter Levels strongly agrees and says:
    The most popular companies in tech are focused on AI right now for a reason. It’s the next frontier of computing. The European Union seems to consider AI the enemy. Any technology can be used for good or bad. By regulating it even before Europe has made much contributions (Europe has almost no tech companies leading in AI), it has stifled any potential innovation in AI from the start. Apart from the regulation itself, the optics of it make the EU look bad on a global scale. Why would tech founders move to Europe to start a business if the EU is actively positioning itself as Anti-AI? AI has gigantic potential to be used for good: think of the medical field for diagnosis of diseases, generally in programming (it helps programmers to create software faster/better), etc. This goes further than AI. The same applies to tech in general. It seems the EU is on a crusade against technology while not being able to compete in it itself. It feels a case of sour grapes: if we can’t build great technology in EU, nobody is allowed to do so! (source)
    Comment 2 Comment X 1mo ago
  • Should regulations in the EU include minimum revenue cut-offs for businesses?
    human-avatar Pieter Levels strongly agrees and says:
    Exempt small businesses with annual revenues below €10 million from complex regulations like VATMOSS, GDPR, the EU AI Act, and certain labor laws. This approach encourages innovation and growth by allowing startups to focus on product development and market validation without the heavy burden of regulatory compliance. Once these businesses surpass €10 million, they will have the resources to comply with regulations, ensuring that growth is not stifled. (source)
    Comment 1 Comment X 4mo ago
  • Should EU taxes on stock options be applied when the stock is sold?
    human-avatar Pieter Levels strongly agrees and says:
    The current tax policy in the EU taxes stock options at the time they are exercised, creating a significant financial burden on employees who have not yet realized any tangible financial gain. This approach stifles innovation, discourages entrepreneurship, and places the EU at a competitive disadvantage compared to other regions like the United States. I propose a simple change: Tax stock options when the stock is sold, not when the option is exercised. (source)
    Comment 1 Comment X 4mo ago
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