If you are unwilling to follow regulations to sell your hardware here, then it tells me the regulations are already doing its job properly.
It was good enough for the US.
A lot of things good enough for the US are not considered suitable or safe here.
Correctly so, I might add.
If your government is not concerned with public safety, why should the EU adopt the same stance?
For electronic products, it should be enough to get the CE mark on your product, and it can be sold in any country. That is the point of the EU, that any company can sell it's products or services in the whole union, there are regulations, but they are union wide, not specific for each country.
Unless you were making something very special, that each country wants to and is allowed to regulate separately.
Taxes can be different, the VAT % is different in each country. But so is it also in each county or town in the US, and your people claim that this is the reason why you can't include taxes on prices in grocery shops, which is difficult to believe here for our people. So dealing with different tax rates shouldn't be big news for you? I mean... there are lots of online shops that know about different tax rates, it's not difficult. Or you could let someone else handle it for you.
Hope you don't accidentally fall off a historical ledge that can't get a handrail.
Without being more specific, the only thing I can presume is that you were unwilling to follow regulations here.
I furnished and equipped my home a couple of years ago, and I had plenty of options for dishwashers, from multiple brands. Many different models at varied price points.
This tells me that serious companies have little problems to follow regulations to compete here.
This all really sounds like a "you" problem.
The US does not have that.
And to clarify, if there was a single regulatory body, it would be fine. I just didn't want to deal with each country.
Probably a shame since it was totally safe. Too much regulation causes your costs to go up and features to go down.
I don't blame your attitude here. If you can't get something, you want to come up with something that makes you feel better.
Yes, the EU is not a country. Each country has their own government, with regulations of their own.
I am in favor of some sort lf EU federalization for this reason, there's a lot of redundancy.
On the other hand, you could just choose a country to operate, which is a normal thing to do. There are things I could find, for example, in France that I cannot find in the country where I live