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by Joeri
2982 days ago
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It also means that despite being a single market you can’t realistically launch a product across the EU. A SV startup can immediately address the whole US (if they don’t have a physical presence), but an EU startup has to go country by country. That means growth is slower, and talent is less competed for. After brexit I’d like to see business & gov across the EU standardize on english as lingua franca to enable faster growth. |
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I wonder whether this will become easier now when the UK leaves, because the English language won't be tied to the competition between the major states.
This is definitely a shame for London, which I think was emerging as the centre of English-speaking Europe, I expect that role now will be more spread across a number of northern European cities, like Stockholm, Copenhagen, Amsterdam etc.