The question of why anti-differentiation is "harder" than differentiation was the topic of an earlier question, and some of the answers are interesting, but I'm not sure they fully answer it, and this question will not be exactly the same. Someone pointed out that in numerical work, integration is easy and differentiation is hard, and someone else spoke of local versus global.
There ought to be an answer in the context of differential algebra rather than analysis, so the local-versus-global issue and the numerical issues won't be there to complicate the question.
Can the statement that one is easier than the other be made into a precisely stateable and provable theorem? If so, how?