Environmental regulation stringency — emissions caps, standards, phase-out mandates, carbon pricing, renewable portfolio standards.
Sector-specific licensing regimes, concentration / quota allocation, state-controlled entry (energy, telecoms, healthcare, banking).
Product-market regulation, entry barriers, licensing burdens, network-industry regulation, price controls.
Trade policy openness — tariffs, non-tariff barriers, FTAs, industrial protection.
Directive (EU) 2022/2464 — the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) — replaces and expands the 2014 NFRD, requiring large EU companies and listed SMEs (and qualifying non-EU groups) to publish detailed sustainability disclosures aligned with European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS) drafted by EFRAG. Reports cover double-materiality, climate transition plans, workforce, and value-chain impacts, subject to mandatory third-party limited assurance.
Per invariant 3, reforms are scored by what they did on each channel-separated axis, not by the party that enacted them. This fingerprint is how the policy-match engine finds historical analogues.
Explicit links are curated by the author. Inferred links are hypotheses in the library that test the same axes this policy moved — the framework's answer to "what does the data say about a policy like this?".
Ranked by axis-fingerprint overlap with this policy. Direction match bolded — those are the closest historical analogues. Shape of the match is what drives policy-outcome comparison, not the country or party label.