European Union leaders will brainstorm tomorrow on how to help Europe compete with the US ⁠and China and become more autonomous by strengthening the bloc’s economy.

The European Commission has dubbed the main barriers to creating a stronger EU single market the “Terrible Ten” and said removing them should be a priority.

1 – Complicated business establishment and operations – High hurdles for setting up and running businesses ‌across borders.

2 – Overly ⁠complex EU rules – EU laws sometimes contradict each other.

3 – Lack of Single Market ownership – EU governments do not enforce or integrate common rules they agreed on.

4 – Limited recognition of professional qualifications – orkers cannot ‌easily move between countries because their diplomas/degrees are not recognised across borders.

5 – Lack ⁠of common standards – Technical or quality requirements differ from ‌country to country.

6 – Fragmented rules on packaging, labelling, ⁠and waste – Diverging ‌national, often environmental, regulations.

7 – Lack of product compliance – there are often different product standards among the 27 EU countries.

8 – Restrictive national ⁠service regulations – Because of different laws, service companies cannot do ⁠business across borders.

9 – Burdensome posting of workers – Political sensitivity related to accepting workers from other EU countries and high, related administrative costs limit cross-border employment.

10 – Territorial supply constraints – There are restrictions hindering retailers from getting products from ‌across the EU.