Which is exactly how it should be handled, IMO: Deal with the abuse situations directly.
Forcing new companies to capitalize with an arbitrary amount of money at time of founding penalizes small players who want to start a company. It's also not a hurdle at all for large players who want to commit large frauds.
That's a barrier to entry; and who likes to perpetrate those? Why big, established companies who lobby the government.
A construction company that pockets ten million dollars and doesn't build anything probably can't shield its owner this way, but a single-developer software consultancy that pockets ten thousand dollars and delivers buggy code can.
"Computers are hard, yo!". It devalues the profession.
And I thought no liability was bad enough... But no. Now its LLMs and " for entertainment purposes only". I take it management and leadership also read that, and don't give one fuck.
The problem is building software to those standards of reliability is expensive and slow. Consumer software never justifies it. Business software rarely does. If you want me to accept liability for the consequences of bugs in code I write, I'm giving you a schedule five times as long and a price twenty times as high.
Is this a joke? There's a major outage effecting flights at least yearly. The Delta one is from May...
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2022_Southwest_Airlines_schedu... [2] https://www.usatoday.com/story/travel/airline-news/2026/05/0...
They should have said aircraft manufacturers, not airlines, but it’s clear what they meant.
It's called phoenixing. There are good few bans for it every year, but almost no convictions for fraud.
If you mean why not register in your state, then Delaware has some tax benefits I believe. Not sure they will apply in MA though, maybe somewhere else?
American LLC taxation is as simple as or even simpler than Anlage EÜR. And you don't need a tax advisor to do it.
You may consider a capital stock of "at least 1€" even significantly less than 25k€. Not sure you are arguing in good faith.
What’s wild is that this is pre-debt. The banks will have their own risk math for you so it’ll be a completely separate set of hoops before you get to be in debt as a company. Most will not even talk to you if you have 0€ in the business account. I don’t feel like a company with no assets or income can do that much damage to their societies.
Also as a small company in the EU I have to have liability insurance for the company for any major clients so the insurance company also will make you jump through further hoops.
Keep in mind that those companies will almost always own some debit to their employees when they blow up.
IMO, $25k is a ridiculous amount of capital to require from a company before they can operate. But capital requirements are good, and they should be proportional to employment, not company existence.