The European Commission's (Anti)Competitiveness Compass
The European Union doesn’t need a five-year plan—it needs free markets.

The European Commission unveiled the Competitiveness Compass, a new initiative aimed at boosting member states' productivity, on Tuesday. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen declared that the E.U. must adapt to a changing world to defend its values, but the Competitive Compass doubles down on central planning and aggressive environmental targets.
Despite its extensive integrated market, internally and internationally, the European Commission recognizes that the Union has "not kept pace with other major economies." In 2023, the Union's gross domestic product (GDP) per capita was $53,783 (in 2021 dollars), a level that the U.S. hasn't seen since 1999 and far less than U.S. GDP per capita of $74,578 in 2023. To provide more perspective, the European Commission praises a historically low unemployment rate of 6.1 percent in 2023; the American unemployment rate was nearly half that in the same year.
In its "Communication from the Commission," which details the policies that von der Leyer believes will make the E.U. more competitive, the Commission rightly identifies high energy prices and a high regulatory burden as making Europe's companies less competitive internationally. Nevertheless, it continues to double down on its ambitious climate goals. The Communication aims to create "a decarbonised economy by 2050" while reducing emissions by 90 percent by 2040.
The report also includes a "Clean Industrial Deal" that will provide subsidies for decarbonization while avoiding market distortions. (This is impossible—subsidies, by definition, are intended to change market behavior.) Meanwhile, the Commission calls for "technology neutrality" but, in the same paragraph, calls for "investing in recharging infrastructure and promoting uptake of electric vehicles."
The Competitiveness Compass gives lip service to deregulation, touting "the first-ever Commissioner for Implementation and Simplification…to identify ways to simplify, consolidate and codify legislation" and recommends reducing reporting burdens by "at least 25 percent for all companies." At the same time, the Commission doubles down on regulation, top-down dictates, and industrial policy, listing over 40 "acts," "directives," "frameworks," "guidelines," "initiatives," "packages," "pacts," "plans," "regulations," "reviews," "roadmaps," and "strategies," which direct public funds to industries and research the Commission believes will result in economic growth.
The Commission repeats it will use "public funding in a more focused and targeted way," but does not explain how it will do so. Unlike market actors who rely on price signals to determine how to most efficiently allocate private capital, the government lacks the proper incentives to make profitable investments. Moreover, subsidizing sectors promotes neither productive efficiency nor innovation; it perversely incentivizes firms to invest and produce suboptimally because they don't bear the full costs of doing so.
The Commission is similarly confused about the incentives involved in forced technology transfer. The Communication states that "pro-competitive technology licensing agreements [incentivize] initial [research and development], and [promote] innovation," but this is not so. A company has more incentive to make R&D investments when they are entitled to the exclusive use of their innovation, which allows them to differentiate their product from competitors and earn a profit.
To its credit, the Communication highlights how international trade agreements with Mexico and South American nations can increase the E.U.'s economic competitiveness. However, the majority of the plan increases the role and size of the public sector and is the wrong way to go. The European Commission should go back to the drawing board and create a plan that shrinks the size of government, reduces regulations, and increases economic freedom.
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The best reporting in all of Europe
Most of that speech was laying out what they want the results to be, while leaving the policies largely undefined or laughably defined. It was technocratic humbug.
"European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen declared that the E.U. must adapt to a changing world to defend its values," which of course focuses not on competitiveness, markets, or innovations but "central planning and aggressive environmental targets."
I say let them be non competitive, it can only work to our advantage.
My Christmas wish list for Trump includes defunding NATO such that European powers bear their "fair share" of all defense costs. After WW2, the Marshall Plan, and 40+ years of protecting their arrogant assess from Soviet invasion, is seems only "fair."
Meanwhile, the Commission calls for "technology neutrality" but, in the same paragraph, calls for "investing in recharging infrastructure and promoting uptake of electric vehicles."
Just. Really. Popular.
Shut up and get on the (electric) train.
"European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen..."
"Ursula has great powers..."
Not to mention tentacles.
Europe has thousands of years of superior people ruling over grumbling but ultimately compliant peasants. Why would they change now?
Which is why they harbor a special hatred for Americans [well, the US specifically].
That is an important point that seems undervalued by Americans generally. European societies are founded upon the premise that the government rules for the benefit of "the people" who are the subjects of government and that the good of society in general is the goal. The problem lies in determining what that "good" might be and how to determine the proper rules to achieve the goal.
The Founders of the United States of America started with the opposite assumption: that "the people" were not to be ruled by anyone but would form a compact that included forming agencies with limited authority to implement functions that "the people" almost all agreed needed implementing for their own individual benefit. That has clearly failed as the deep state now rules over the American people with almost no practical limitations on their authority.
"To its credit, the Communication highlights how international trade agreements with Mexico and South American nations can increase the E.U.'s economic competitiveness."
Obviously, then, the EU should finance the emigration of a few million Mexican and South American (BTW: why skip Central America?) citizens. I know a nation that would be glad to chip in some that we are told have a proven record of enhancing a country's economy.
Do they even know how great food trucks are?
Wonder how many food trucks you could get on a RORO cargo ship.
The EU does not need either a five year plan OR free markets. What the EU needs is an expert in newspeak and double-plus-unthink who can write press releases that are not so painfully, obviously self-contradictory! Progressivist Socialists are EXPERT in deluding themselves and holding two or more mutually exclusive concepts in the same tiny minds at the same time. Now that the serfs no longer believe anything they say or have any confidence in government, they need to up their 1984 game.
I predict that based upon the success of the US over the next 3-4 years, Europe will follow suit [due to aggrieved citizens, not their leadership].
Bureaucrats don't want free markets. Where's the grift in that? In a free market you actually have to provide something of value, and beat your competitors in the eyes of your customers. Advancing some tangential agenda becomes an unnecessary expense.
EU's new slogan: Process is Progress.
the biggest problem with the eu is that its 27 different markets