Why did Europe fall behind in tech companies compared to Asia and America?
Why did Europe fall behind in tech companies compared to Asia and America?
Because Varg is right and the based whiteman will return to his roots
Well... America basically invented digital technology and Japan (and later, other eastern nations) produced the products.
europe had Nokia, Philips, Siemens, Alcatel..
Who?
the way gov't operates there in general, regulations, and economic troubles they've had
europe makes all the machines china uses to make tech so... ?
Stop pretending to be retarded
>America basically invented digital technology
With European immigrants. Burgers should start a war against chinks.
one reason is that starting a failed business is a black mark against your name in many places, where in America its understood that many businesses fail and only quitting is punished. Its easier to take a risk when you can still get VC after screwing up once or twice or even more than that
>muh ethnic nationalism
not anymore
>America basically invented digital technology
correction: European immigrants in America did.
...
Yurocucks have way too many regulations.
Is this another alternative universe roleplaying thread?
And the average european still lives a better and safer life than your average mutt does.
Lover I than Asians, higher taxes than the US.
I don't care because I paid off my house so I basically just pocket my income and invest. I also pay the cheapest insurance, so that I don't lose too much money. Taxes suck
Because it got raped by two world wars started by ((())).
>Why did Europe fall behind in tech companies compared to Asia and America?
European tech companies pay tax
>taxes produce free healthcare and in some countries free university though
>Why did Europe fall behind in tech companies
I don't think you understand how large and influential names like SAP and Dassault are in the enterprise market.
Jews. The same reason anything goes backwards.
We dont have the internet mega corps molochs you have, which is a good thing desu.
Most of our technology is in stuff like cars, planes, robotics.
Probably because the states cheat their way out of everything, germany still wants its gold back btw.
Also europe is less in debt than the states
Free market. Europe has too much taxation and regulation, both of which hinder competition and innovation. Europe is basically socialism lite. Only good thing coming out of there nowadays is government funded CERN work, and who’s to say they aren’t squandering a good portion of that funding?
lol south america makes better planes than europe
Airbus wasted so much government money to make a double deck airliner in the era of the twin jet
they don't make any cutting edge eletronics
because america kickstarted the digital revolution through cold war defense spending, then outsourced everything to chinks
europeans are just slurping at the dribble
I dunno
It's weird tho, like Europe is only technologically relevant in manufacturing and heavy industry. All of their consumer tech like computers and automobiles just fell behind. Maybe it has to do with the rise of euro unity? All the small companies serving each country competing against each other for control of the European market as a whole, only to be squashed individually by the large internationals of Asia and the US?
>missing enormous conglomerates in tech
There's Siemens, ABB, Alstom, Roche, Beyer, Novartis and the whole car industry (which is much more relevant than US car industry). Just to name some that I can think of from the top of my head.
No hes right. None of those brands mean shit today.
Siemens is actually still big for industrial stuff I think. But you're right the others are almost irrelevant.
is that why every single US corporation is hiding taxes in the Republic of Ireland which is part of the EU? moron brainwashed fatburger. keep importing more than exporting and blaming everything on other people.
>America
Just paying for brain.
don't they all still exist, I know for a fact that Nokia is huge contributor to 5G, just because they don't make consumer products doesn't mean they are not huge players in Electronics.
because most of the tech it produced got bought by big US companies.
Europe is massive in non-consumer electronics and heavy machinery.
..and siemens is the biggest contributor in corruption inside E.U..
They throw the most money to governments and politicians.
>regulations
yet britain and most of scandinavia has great economic freedom. the real diff with america is that investors are more conservative and careful.
>Taxes suck
you would love Ireland i guess
>Siemens
based its success on corruption
>Beyer
same
>Novartis
same
Some components used in flagship smartphones are made in Europe, and I don't mean only ARM CPUs. There are sensors that are made in Germany which are used in iphones, for example.
Must be some differences in culture, both entrepreneurial and financial.
The 60s mentality produced the entrepreneurs of Silicon Valley and their race to become the first companies to produce and sell personal computers.
But both Europe and USA lost their relevance in hardware manufacturing to Asia.
Also, the USA is awash with free money, printed by the Fed and funneled into big banks which invest in stocks, thus inflating the value of all those Silicon Valley startups, based on nothing but hype.
Outsource the real work to Asia, package the whole thing in Californian tinsel (software, design.. ) and you have a globally relevant product.
Europe is not a country, so it didn't have a common policy or common ground to achieve this. Europe is still fragmented into countries that are tied to their own markets mostly.
The EU is a relatively recent thing, it started to become more ambitious after the 90s. Then it got hit by the financial crisis, Greek debt etc.
way less investor friendly
>Europe is not a country
Not yet.
Look at Canada, overregulation makes starting a company a pain. Taxes are too high and the regulatory burden kills small companies like mine.
So now I need to figure out how to move to Seattle and try again.
Working is punished in Europe, starting a business even more so.