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Josef Taalbi. Photo

Josef Taalbi

Senior lecturer

Josef Taalbi. Photo

Fueling radical and renewable innovations? An analysis of public innovation funding in Sweden, 1970-2021

Author

  • Johanna Fink
  • Josef Taalbi

Summary, in English

In the face of climate change, governments are scaling up public investments in mitigation efforts and green technologies. However, critics question the ability of public funding agencies to promote the most promising innovations. This paper contributes to this debate by presenting a long-term database, that directly links Swedish innovations to public funding between 1970 and 2021. We use logistic regression models to analyze what innovations are most likely to receive public funding. A remarkably high share of the most radical innovations relied on public funding: 43% over the whole period, reaching 55% in the last decade. Moreover, renewable energy innovations attracted increasing public support over time.
Those developed after 2000 are twice as likely to be publicly funded. Contrary to received notions that governments are unable to pick winners, our findings highlight that public spending in Sweden has shaped market conditions, aptly funding the most radical innovations, and that public funding agencies
played a crucial role in climate change mitigation efforts by supporting the development of renewable energy technologies.

Department/s

  • Department of Economic History
  • Sustainability transformations over time and space
  • Growth, technological change, and inequality

Publishing year

2024

Language

English

Publication/Series

Lund Papers in Economic History

Issue

2024:260

Document type

Preprint

Publisher

Department of Economic History, Lund University

Topic

  • Economic History

Status

Published

Project

  • SWINNO 3.0 Significant Swedish technological Innovations from 1970 until now