Yea, because if they get bigger they'll get crushed by EU regulations, bureaucracy and unions.
And when you don't have enough incoming orders you can't just fire employees. It's more "profitable" to lose out on orders than to hire more people to fulfil those orders. Because you can't just fire excess employees when the economy is in a slump. You're stuck paying them to do nothing.
Yea, because if they get bigger they'll get crushed by EU regulations, bureaucracy and unions.
And when you don't have enough incoming orders you can't just fire employees. It's more "profitable" to lose out on orders than to hire more people to fulfil those orders. Because you can't just fire excess employees when the economy is in a slump. You're stuck paying them to do nothing.