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European AI Regulation and Business: Financial Times Warns on Competitiveness Cost

2026-03-28| 1 min read| Recovered Live Archive

The FT editorial board argues that EU AI regulation must balance safety and competitiveness as European businesses face compliance costs that US rivals do not.

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Key vocabulary
Competitiveness: a key term used in this report
Regulation: a key term used in this report
requirements: a key term used in this report
compliance: acting according to rules or laws
competitive: a key term used in this report
Financial: a key term used in this report
companies: a key term used in this report
Times: a key term used in this report

AI Regulation's Double-Edged Sword: Europe's Safety vs. Competitiveness Dilemma

The Financial Times published an editorial this week arguing that the EU's approach to AI regulation — however well-intentioned in its safety and rights protection objectives — risks imposing compliance costs and market entry barriers on European AI companies that their American competitors do not face, creating a structural competitive disadvantage precisely in the technology domain most likely to define economic winners and losers over the coming decade. The argument reflects a genuine tension within European AI policy that the Commission's implementation decisions will need to navigate carefully.

The EU AI Act, which entered full force for most provisions in 2026, creates a tiered regulatory framework based on risk classification. AI systems deemed high-risk — covering applications in employment, education, credit scoring, healthcare diagnostics, law enforcement, and border management — must meet stringent requirements for transparency, accuracy, data governance, human oversight, and conformity assessment before they can be deployed. These requirements are designed to prevent AI from causing serious harm in high-stakes decisions affecting people's lives, and the policy rationale is sound.

But the compliance cost of these requirements is substantial, particularly for startups and smaller companies that lack the legal, technical, and compliance infrastructure of large corporations. A small European AI company developing a recruitment screening tool must spend significant resources on conformity assessments, documentation, and ongoing monitoring that its Silicon Valley competitor — selling the same product into European markets but based in a jurisdiction with no equivalent requirements — does not face in its home market. The question of whether the AI Act's external market access provisions — which require non-EU AI companies to comply when their systems are used in the EU — will be effectively enforced against large American platforms is crucial to whether this competitive asymmetry is real or merely theoretical.

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The FT editorial board argues that EU AI ____2____ must balance safety and ____1____ as European businesses face ____3____ costs that US rivals do not.

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#ai#regulation#eu#competitiveness#business#startup

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