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Published on Tuesday, July 16, 2024 | Updated on Thursday, July 18, 2024

Global | Deep Science

Summary

The EU's aspirations for sustainability, competitiveness, and resilience hinge on its ability to close the innovation gap with the US in disruptive technologies. This requires a dual approach: significantly increasing targeted public funding and creating a more inviting environment for private investment.

Key points

  • Key points:
  • Deep Science refers to the ecosystem of non-digital disruptive innovations, such as nanotechnology, biotechnology, or robotics.
  • Science Equity refers to the ecosystem of investors who seek to create value from scientific discoveries and research.
  • Deep Science has been one of the historical pillars of European competitiveness, but today there are concerns about bottlenecks in Science Equity.
  • European authorities acknowledge the problem, but the solutions remain insufficient.

Geographies

Documents and files

Presentation (PDF)

DEEP-SCIENCE-presentation-January-2024.pdf

English - July 16, 2024

Report (PDF)

Economic-Watch-July-2024.pdf

English - July 16, 2024

Authors

NC
Noelia Cámara BBVA Research - Principal Economist
SC
Sonsoles Castillo BBVA Research - Chief Economist for Financial and Economic Analysis
AD
Alberto Díaz Be Able Capital
RG
Rubén Gargallo Abargues BBVA Research
NG
Nara González BBVA Research
DL
David López Be Able Capital
LM
Lucía Martín BBVA Research
PM
Pilar Más Rodríguez BBVA Research - Principal Economist
�M
Ángel Mesa Be Able Capital
AN
Alejandro Neut BBVA Research - Lead Economist
RR
Roberto Ranera Be Able Capital
JS
Jorge Sicilia BBVA Research - Chief Economist of BBVA Group
AT
Almudena Trigo Be Able Capital
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