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by leononame
656 days ago
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It definitely does not show that, it's just a number and you're interpreting it. But other interpretations are just as valid, e.g. - Germans founding less because they're more risk-averse
- having less AI startups because other types of companies are founded more often
- Less wish to found because of a strong job market that gives you excellent jobs with decision power/money/whatever it is you seek in founding yourself
- People have more families and don't want to quit their current jobs I probably could come up with more. Is it a hassle to found a new company in Germany? Sure. But I've found that for people who do want to start something, that's not a showstopper. Personally, I would attribute low startup numbers to cultural risk aversion of Germans |
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Which is literally one aspect of how easy or hard it is to create a startup and get it somewhere. Can't fire people quickly enough since market is changing daily? Well it will be a nightmare for the owners to become or remain relevant enough to stay afloat.
I am not bashing EU just to be clear, having more job stability has tons of long term positive consequences on population's mental state and 2nd and 3rd order positive effects (the usage of various 'mental' medication in US seems to be ridiculously high compared to 3 countries in Europe I've lived in for example), but good environment for agile fail fast startups it ain't.