As I watch Europe¡¯s deepening existential crisis over its grim growth prospects, I often think back to a speech I heard 16 years ago in Paris. I was a lowly consultant for the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development, but for some reason they had let me in to a fancy lunchtime reception, where I listened to a senior staff member describe how the financial crisis proved the validity of the European economic model. Slow, steady and highly regulated growth, she explained, was superior to the American boom-and-bust version of capitalism.

What a difference a decade and a half makes.

Last year Mario Draghi, the former president of the European Central Bank, released his now infamous "Draghi report,¡± which blames excessive and fragmented European regulations for strangling growth. Business owners in countries such as Germany must comply not only with their own country¡¯s regulations, but also with the EU¡¯s. As a result,they spend too many hours dealing with red tape and the costs are unduly felt by smaller businesses. According to the report, 55% of small- and medium-sized businesses cite regulatory obstacles as their greatest challenge. The General Data Protection Regulation, for example, has made it nearly impossible for small technology firms to compete.