TY - BOOK AU - Braunerhjelm,Pontus AU - Henrekson,Magnus ED - SpringerLink (Online service) TI - Unleashing Society’s Innovative Capacity: An Integrated Policy Framework T2 - International Studies in Entrepreneurship, SN - 9783031427565 AV - HC79.T4 U1 - 338.064 23 PY - 2024/// CY - Cham PB - Springer International Publishing, Imprint: Springer KW - Technological innovations KW - Industrial policy KW - Economic development KW - Macroeconomics KW - Economics of Innovation KW - Regulation and Industrial Policy KW - Economic Development, Innovation and Growth KW - Macroeconomics and Monetary Economics N1 - 1. The Challenge -- 2. Theories of Growth, Innovation, and Entrepreneurship -- 3. Promoting Entrepreneurship and Innovation—The Institutional Framework -- 4. Policies to Stimulate Innovation and Entrepreneurship -- 5. Tax Policy to Stimulate Innovation and Entrepreneurship -- 6. Conclusions: A Framework for Innovation Policy; Open Access N2 - This is an open access book. Europe faces significant challenges in the coming decades: geopolitical, demographic, technological, increased competition, climate-related, and health issues due to an aging population, to mention a few. Given these challenges, technological progress and new ways of handling complex issues will be key to continued prosperity and growth. To accomplish a growth process driven by innovation and entrepreneurship, the institutional environment must take into account a multitude of different policy areas that interact to either strengthen or weaken an economy's innovative potential. Innovation is not only about R&D and higher education but is also intimately related to entrepreneurship. Similarly, entrepreneurship is not only about low start-up costs and favorable tax rates. Hence, a consistent and coordinated policy environment conducive to innovation and entrepreneurship is required to translate innovation into high-growth firms and macro-level growth. This book presents the basic cornerstones required to provide a policy regime that can nurture such dynamics. The authors draw extensively on empirical analysis of the development of the Swedish economy, which has been transformed from a so-called "sclerosis" state in the 1980s until the early 1990s to an economy characterized by successful entrepreneurship and innovation. This transformation resulted from a reform agenda that has been gradually rolled out, beginning in the mid-1980s. The authors argue that the Swedish experience provides useful lessons for other nations as well UR - https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-42756-5 ER -