There is broad agreement that Europe needs to create an industrial policy for a more sustainable and competitive economy. Even if the EU aims at an “economy that works for people” – an economy that is resilient, inclusive, fair, sustainable and innovative – it has so far failed to unlock the competitive potential of sustainable ownership forms that favor innovation and reinvestment. Europe needs to build a competitive edge on its long tradition of more sustainable ownership forms – e.g. cooperatives, enterprise foundations, social economy enterprises – which foster innovation, reinvestment and resilience, and ensure prosperity even in the times of economic crises. Yet, many of these entities constantly have to swim upstream: unlike ‘mainstream’ enterprises, they do not enjoy ready-made enterprise forms, or easy access to public and private financing. In order to reap the competitive benefits of ownership forms that favor reinvestment, innovation and resilience, we call for new industrial policy for a sustainable economy.
The whitepaper is edited by Marija Bartl (University of Amsterdam), Nena van der Horst (University of Amsterdam) and Rutger Claassen (Utrecht University). It contains contributions from a wide range of European specialists in academia, company leadership and policy-making.
With contributions from: Bertram Lomfield, Jennifer Hinton, Nien-He Shieh, Mario Pagano, Anne Sanders, Rasmus Feldthusen, Annika Schneider, Maike Kauffmann, Gijsbert Koren, Bart van Breukelen, Melanie Rieback, Lisa Herzog, Inigo Gonzalez Ricoy, Tej Gonza, Dylan Paauwe, Sara Lafuente, Jasper Sluijs, Toon Meelen, Ralf Hoffrogge, Björn Hoops, Sophie Bloemen, Deborah Tappi.
With the support of European Research Council, The Business Corporation as a Political Actor (grant no. 865165) and Law as a Vehicle for Social Change: Mainstreaming Non-Extractive Economic Practices (grant no. 852990).