Given the precarious economic situation, the Eagle Round, an association of Tyrolean Company -Bosses with a total of around 30,000 employees, is calling for politics – and it is criticized by the Chamber of Commerce.
The requirements for bureaucracy -reduction are not new, but that makes the difference: the Eagle Round reached drastic words on Tuesday. You don’t want alarmism, “but the cabin is on fire – and the fire brigade is still in the garage. Do we still want to save the location or bureaucracy? We are still managing our country to death,” the management team around President Karl Christian Handl agreed.
Two months of work for bureaucracy
One -man owners in Austria spend 250 hours a year with bureaucratic effort, “that is almost two months of working time. In some industries, the costs for this amount up to 4.3 billion euros. Money that can be invested in much wisely in the companies.” Companies that do well are much more willing to make offers, such as childcare.
“Self -responsibility and common sense”
The Eagle Round now wants to talk to the state government and talk about deregulation and reduction of bureaucracy. “Now something really has to happen,” said Vice President Josef Empl. New laws must be checked for practical orientation, reporting and documentation obligations must be reduced. “It does not need instruction to get on a ladder,” Empl spoke “self -responsibility and common sense”.
Chamber of Commerce goes with it
The entrepreneurs, many of whom are also active worldwide, criticize their own register. This is part of the problem: “It is too busy with itself and has no time to provide solutions. The room is part of the bureaucracy and after school of protectionism.”
Source: Krone

I’m Ben Stock, a journalist and author at Today Times Live. I specialize in economic news and have been working in the news industry for over five years. My experience spans from local journalism to international business reporting. In my career I’ve had the opportunity to interview some of the world’s leading economists and financial experts, giving me an insight into global trends that is unique among journalists.