The Croatian Employers’ Association (HUP) has welcomed changes to the Law on Companies and has urged that no new burdensome regulations be introduced.
As Ana Blaskovic/Poslovni Dnevnik writes on the 23rd of April, 2019, recent changes to the Law on Companies, which simplifies the establishment and the liquidation of companies, will enable entrepreneurs to be more competitive and help Croatia to climb up and improve its place on lists such as that of the World Bank, Doing Business, on which Croatia occupies 68th position out of 140 countries worldwide.
The Croatian Employers’ Association (HUP) has openly welcomed these positive changes, but has warned that this step in the right direction should not end up with people simply becoming lost once again but this time in a maze of new obstacles.
“The Croatian Employers’ Association welcomes the simplification of procedures related either to the establishment of companies or to their liquidation, and we expect the introduction of changes that will stimulate the competitiveness of the Croatian economy and make it easier to monitor rapid changes on the global market,” stated Admira Ribičić, the director of legislation and legal affairs at the Croatian Employers’ Association which itself proposed changes in the same direction.
Better competitiveness should bring forward the ability to establish a simple and ”normal” d.o.o. online, just with the payment of court fees, and without the cost of a public notary. The changes to the law open the doors for faster and easier business/company registration. However, even though e-foundation has now come into effect, the application that will enable it to function correctly will only come into force in September.
The Croatian Employers’ Association has also readily welcomed the removal of the stipulation of reserving a company name, the shortening of the deadline for the court to make a decision on registration in the court registry from fifteen to five working days, as well as the provisions for the simpler and cheaper liquidation of a company, simply with a statement proving the non-existence of any debts.
“What worries us most is that we don’t end up with a situation in which we remove a whole host of regulations and end up accidentally replacing them with different ones through changing the regulations. In Croatia, there are between 300 and 400 new regulations introduced annually, or amendments to existing ones, and each of them “laments” the danger of introducing a new administrative or financial burden,” Ribičić concluded.
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Click here for the original article by Ana Blaskovic for Poslovni Dnevnik