EU Considering Simplification of Digital Rules
The European Union (EU) and EU member states are considering reshaping the EU’s digital regulatory landscape. This initiative to simplify and streamline the increasingly complex web of digital rules reflects an EU policy dilemma: the need to continue to guarantee core values including consumer protection and fair market conditions, while reducing administrative burdens, enhancing digital competitiveness, and ensuring digital innovation.
Facilitating a business-friendly and globally competitive regulatory environment is a policy priority of the current European Commission (EC), as outlined in the mission letter to Commissioner Teresa Ribera and framed in the Draghi Report on EU Competitiveness recommendations of September 2024. Various themes from the Draghi Report, including inconsistent enforcement of various regulations, are now being considered in the regulatory simplification debate.
The EU’s digital regulatory framework has grown rapidly in recent years, to include the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), Cybersecurity Act, Digital Services Act, Digital Markets Act, Data Act, and the AI Act (see also our Updates on the AI Act). While these regulations aim to protect consumers, ensure fairness in the digital economy, and foster trust, they also impose significant compliance demands on companies, creating a web of overlapping regulations, and technical standards and guidance that are still being developed and/or continuing to evolve. This has sparked concerns over the EU’s position in the global “tech race,” notably compared to the United States and China.
Several issues are being considered to reduce regulatory uncertainty and facilitate compliance in a rapidly evolving global digital economy. Key themes include the following:
The EC as well as the Polish and the Danish EU Council presidencies have made proposals and been soliciting input on potential improvements to EU digital regulation from EU member states and industry stakeholders:
While the EC is leading the simplification initiative, EU member states are playing a crucial role in shaping it. Certain EU member states’ views are already apparent:
The simplification debate is ongoing, as the EC considers input from EU member states and stakeholders. The forthcoming digital omnibus package, expected by December 2025, will be a key milestone, setting out the first concrete proposals for streamlining EU digital regulation.
The authors wish to acknowledge Ana Jurubescu's contributions to this article.
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Originally published before the Ashurst Perkins Coie combination. See disclaimer.