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Designing Counter-Cyclical Innovation Policies: How Governments Can Stabilize Markets Through Proactive Investment During Shocks
[working paper]
Abstract From climate emergencies and pandemics to energy volatility and geopolitical fragmentation, governments are facing a great policy conundrum in an era defined by repeated and overlapping disruptions: how to stabilise economies not only in response but also in advance of crises. Tools for conventional ... view more
From climate emergencies and pandemics to energy volatility and geopolitical fragmentation, governments are facing a great policy conundrum in an era defined by repeated and overlapping disruptions: how to stabilise economies not only in response but also in advance of crises. Tools for conventional economic stabilization - such as automatic social protection systems, fiscal stimulus, and monetary easing - have proved indispensible. They frequently fail, though, in one important area: getting societies and economies ready for the structural changes that crises surely call for. This policy paper makes case for a paradigm change in government perspective and application of innovative policy. The paper introduces the idea of counter-cyclical innovation policy - the strategic use of innovation investments exactly during downturns, when private sector risk aversion peaks and public purpose is most needed - instead of treating innovation as a long-term, pro-cyclical endeavour to be prioritised during periods of economic stability. This strategy positions innovation not only as a driver of productivity but also as an anchor of resilience, a generator of new economic paths, and a barrier against future systematic vulnerabilities. Inspired by South Korea, the European Union, and the United States, the paper shows that counter-cyclical innovation policy is not only theoretically sound but also practically realistic. Each of Korea's Digital New Deal, the EU's Recovery and Resilience Facility, and the U.S. CHIPS and Science Act presents unique ideas for how focused innovation spending might be a tool for both strategic reconfiguration and economic recovery. These examples demonstrate how well integrated fiscal planning, anticipatory governance, and coherent institutional structures mobilise innovation to produce both long-term structural transformation and economic stabilisation. The paper also investigates the political economy of innovation during crises and reveals important asymmetries impeding efficient application. Among these are the pro-cyclicality of private R&D, the discretionary character of public innovation budgets, and the institutional fragmentation separating innovation agencies from budgetary control. Through an analysis of these obstacles, the paper prepares the ground for a new policy framework in which innovation is seen as a fundamental stabilising role of the state, not as a luxury to be postponed during austerity. This paper ultimately asks leaders in innovation, economists, and legislators to rethink the link between economic stabilisation and innovation. By doing this, it provides a This paper ultimately asks leaders in innovation, economists, and legislators to rethink the link between economic stabilisation and innovation. By doing this, it provides a theoretical justification as well as a workable road map for ensuring that innovation policy is really fit for the shocks of the twenty-first century. In this new paradigm, invention becomes the means by which societies negotiate their storms rather than waiting for them to pass.... view less
Keywords
innovation policy; economic policy; economic growth; crisis management (econ., pol.); stabilization policy; political economy
Classification
Economic Policy
Document language
English
Publication Year
2025
Page/Pages
17 p.
Status
Primary Publication