- More than 54% of European businesses have adopted AI, up from 42% in just one year, but only 22% use AI in a truly transformative way.
- Most businesses only use AI for basic tasks like email summarization, chatbots, and document management, creating limited value.
- Basic business groups achieved a productivity increase of about 40%, while advanced groups reached 62%, creating a large efficiency gap.
- If all were upgraded to advanced AI, Europe could generate approximately €191 billion (~$207 billion) in additional economic value.
- Less than 1/3 of businesses have a clear AI strategy, which has even decreased compared to the previous year.
- Three main barriers include a lack of skills (over 50% of businesses struggle), fragmented regulations, and a lack of investment capital.
- Businesses must spend up to 42% of their tech budgets on legal compliance, equivalent to a “110% tax” according to the IMF.
- Nearly 40% of startups are considering leaving Europe for a better environment, rising to over 50% for high-growth groups.
- Agentic AI is emerging as a new differentiator, but less than 25% of businesses are aware of it and only 3% have fully deployed it.
- Pioneering companies like Ericsson and Debenhams have integrated AI into their core operations, accelerating work processing by 20 times.
📌 Conclusion: Europe leads in AI adoption with 54% of businesses using it, but only 22% exploit it at a transformative level, creating a significant productivity gap (40% vs. 62%). An economic opportunity of approximately $207 billion remains untapped due to skill shortages, complex regulations, and lack of investment. With only 3% deploying agentic AI, future competitiveness will depend on decisions made in the next 2–3 years.
