Entrepreneur Yevgeny Chichvarkin, who moved from Moscow to London in 2008 after pressure on his business, described entrepreneurship in Russia with a line from Yegor Letov’s song: “I’ve been guarding my bag all my life.”
He argues about it in his telegram channel.
“In old Europe, business success depends not so much on the nationality of the judiciary, it also largely depends on religion. It is clear that countries dominated by Protestants or Jews are more successful because of such religious inputs. Countries with absurd, controversial or non-motivational religions are less successful. The level of corruption. The level of the judicial system is such a sufficient intricacies, ”writes Chichvarkin.
In countries like the Emirates, “with zero political freedom, but with almost complete economic freedom, you can perform miracles with low taxes,” Chichvarkin believes. “There are countries where everything seems to be perfect – the climate, energy is inexpensive, traditions, etc., and the people and the state of this people, who do not want to work, help this very well and introduce more and more new restrictions, no matter whether to hire or fire – like in France,” he adds, concluding that there are no ideal countries, and the entrepreneur “is a bonsai-type tree: where it is cut, it does not grow there, where it is bent, there it is bent.” “In each country, it has a form inversely proportional to how this class is interfered with,” he believes.