Brussels writes so many laws
10 comments
·December 5, 2025amadeuspagel
> The Commission initiates legislation, but it has no reason to be reticent. It cannot make policy by announcing new spending commitments and investments, as the budget is tiny, around one percent of GDP, and what little money it has is mostly earmarked for agriculture (one-third) and regional aid (one-third). In Brussels, policy equals legislation. Unlike national civil servants and politicians, civil servants and politicians who work in Brussels have one main path to build a career: passing legislation.
This is also relevant in debt-brake discussions. Many who want a smaller government support limits on debts, but a smaller budget leaves passing laws as the only way for politicians to assert themselves. Often, spending money is a less harmful way for a politician to get a headline then passing a law.
appreciatorBus
In the same way that we budge the quantity of dollars we can spend, we should probably budget the quantity of laws we can create, and laws that can exist at any given time.
jltsiren
The budget is ultimately limited by the government's ability to extract value. There are no similar limits to the quantity of laws and regulations that can be in effect at the same time. Legislators can of course impose an arbitrary limit, but they can just as easily increase the limit or repeal it, if they don't like it.
dmix
Mandatory expiry dates or renewal cycles. You can bypass the expiry/renewal process with a large majority.
solace_silence
Sounds like a lobbyist dream.
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hammock
The more laws we have the more democracy we have! We need more! Look at all the problems around us
I’m not so sure that equating more laws produced with “greater productivity” is necessarily the right idea.