No Result
View All Result
  • Private Data
  • Membership options
  • Login
  • COUNTRY
    • ITALY
    • IBERIA
    • FRANCE
    • UK&IRELAND
    • BENELUX
    • DACH
    • SCANDINAVIA&BALTICS
  • PRIVATE EQUITY
  • VENTURE CAPITAL
  • PRIVATE DEBT
  • DISTRESSED ASSETS
  • REAL ESTATE
  • FINTECH
  • GREEN
  • PREMIUM
    • ItaHubHOT
      • ItaHub Legal
      • ItaHub Tax
      • ItaHub Trend
    • REPORT
    • INSIGHT VIEW
    • Private Data
Subscribe
  • COUNTRY
    • ITALY
    • IBERIA
    • FRANCE
    • UK&IRELAND
    • BENELUX
    • DACH
    • SCANDINAVIA&BALTICS
  • PRIVATE EQUITY
  • VENTURE CAPITAL
  • PRIVATE DEBT
  • DISTRESSED ASSETS
  • REAL ESTATE
  • FINTECH
  • GREEN
  • PREMIUM
    • ItaHubHOT
      • ItaHub Legal
      • ItaHub Tax
      • ItaHub Trend
    • REPORT
    • INSIGHT VIEW
    • Private Data
Home COUNTRY DACH

Why immigration will be the deciding factor in Europe’s innovation race

EU Startupsby EU Startups
August 8, 2024
Reading Time: 7 mins read
in DACH, FRANCE, GREEN, UK&IRELAND, VENTURE CAPITAL
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Countries around the world are locked in a race to develop the smartest AI, the most advanced semiconductors, and the greatest space exploration capabilities. What I find ironic is that, at the same time, many are actively resisting one of the greatest drivers of innovation a nation could hope for: immigration.

The rising popularity of far-right politics and sentiment in many countries across Europe has gone hand in hand with more severe anti-immigration attitudes. France has just passed a restrictive immigration law, and despite opening its doors during the refugee crisis a decade ago, Germany’s rhetoric around immigration is becoming harsher. Anti-immigration politicians have risen to power in Italy, the Netherlands… I could go on.

Yet this is happening against the backdrop of ageing populations across Europe’s economic powerhouses. Without immigration, these countries will have to reckon with a decline in labour and talent in the next few decades.

This is not just a question of the labour force. Over my decades of work with startup founders across the world, I’ve seen immigrants show the strongest attributes for building disruptive businesses. Studies in Europe and beyond show that they have a greater impact on entrepreneurship than natives. Yet still, they face higher barriers to success.

Here are my thoughts on why Europe should welcome immigration from all corners of the world to bolster progress.

Dissuade immigration now and regret it later

Decreasing populations lead to a shortage of workers, a struggle for skills, and economic turmoil—all of which drain momentum for innovation, research, and development. The EU has expressed concerns about its shrinking populations specifically hampering digitalisation, the green transition, and EU competitiveness.

Within just seven years, the working-age population of Europe will shrink by 1 million people every year, the European Commissioner for Home Affairs, Ylva Johansson, warned recently. The populations of Romania, Bulgaria, Georgia, Greece, and Hungary are already in decline, according to new PEW research spanning 2000 to 2020. Italy, Germany, the Czech Republic, Portugal, and others would be going in the same direction if not for newly arriving foreigners. The continent needs immigration to buck this trend.

The EU as an organisation seems to agree and has turned directly to immigrants as a potential solution, recently presenting a new service to connect non-EU workers with EU jobs. However, this reality is harder to swallow for certain governments, especially as the far right grows. Instead, countries like France, Italy, Hungary, and Poland are promoting pronatalist policies to try and get more natives to have children, though the impact of such strategies is likely to disappoint. In Italy, years of fruitless pro-fertility campaigns have not dented a declining birth rate.

Ultimately, many European countries are thinking about this issue politically rather than logically. To sustain a thriving economy and business ecosystem long term, without which innovation flatlines, they need to be bringing people in and filling jobs, not putting up barriers based on where people were born.

earth

Make the most of immigrants’ huge potential

Innovation doesn’t just depend on having a robust, vibrant economy. It is driven by the ambition, talent and grit of the individual scientists, engineers and entrepreneurs on the edge of new discoveries.

In my years working with immigrant and non-immigrant entrepreneurs, I’ve realised that the strongest common denominator for success is typically having overcome the hardship of embarking on a one-way journey to a new country.

A 2022 European study found that immigrants – both EU and non-EU – are more inclined to become entrepreneurs than natives. However, non-EU entrepreneurs had a lower chance of success. That suggests that despite being more willing to start a business, non-EU immigrants are facing higher barriers to their business taking off compared to natives and intra-EU migrants, who benefit from similar legal treatment to natives.

Other research also shows that the value of European immigrants is underappreciated. Between 2017 and 2022 in Europe, half of immigrants with degrees were employed in jobs they were overqualified for, compared to just one in three natives. They were also twice as likely to be unemployed.

The US example supports the idea that it pays to nurture immigrant entrepreneurs. They’re responsible for over half of unicorns, a third of innovative output, and one in four patents – despite representing only 14% of the population.

That data is echoed in some European countries where relevant research has been carried out. In Germany, which over the past few years has become one of the world’s primary destinations for immigrants, 2023 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) data shows that over a quarter of all entrepreneurs are immigrants or children of immigrants, and they have a higher entrepreneurial activity than native-born Germans. 

Despite the turmoil of Brexit and changes in migrant flows, immigrant and non-white ethnic populations have consistently been the most entrepreneurially active groups in the UK, 2024 GEM data shows.

But the more nations close off accessible paths to residency or citizenship, or encourage anti-immigration rhetoric, the less likely it is they’ll attract migrants moving forward. For countries who want to have a horse in the global tech race, they should be placing far more value in nurturing immigration rather than dissuading it.

skilled-based-hiring

Not just the ‘highly skilled’ immigrants

While it’s easier to talk about the perceived benefits of attracting “skilled” immigrants, countries shouldn’t just assign value to people who have higher education or an existing trade.

All immigrants are a gift to nations. The journey they take to set themselves up in a foreign land – often perilous and uncertain – is not to be underestimated as a show of strength and determination.

So many of the qualities that come with being an immigrant end up translating into forceful entrepreneurship. I’ve found that immigrants are less likely to give up when they come up against tough obstacles, as they already know they have it in them to overcome what is seemingly impossible. They are able to twist and turn their trajectory until they emerge on the other side.

As an example of that resilience, a UK study found that at the height of the pandemic, early-stage entrepreneurial activity of UK natives fell from 9.8% in 2019 to 6% in 2020, while for immigrant entrepreneurs, the rate of activity actually rose by a percentage point.

Diverse populations are a core ingredient for innovation. Without that dynamism, a country is less likely to be an engine of new research, groundbreaking solutions and disruptive ideas.

Read the orginal article: https://www.eu-startups.com/2024/08/why-immigration-will-be-the-deciding-factor-in-europes-innovation-race-semyon-dukach/

Gateways to Italy

Gateways to Italy – Offer your services to funds and investors willing to explore opportunities in Italy. Become a partner!

Gateways to Italy – Offer your services to funds and investors willing to explore opportunities in Italy. Become a partner!

by Partner
June 6, 2023

Sign up to our newsletter

SIGN UP

Related Posts

DACH

White & Case advises bank syndicate on OMV´s €750 million hybrid bond issuance

June 30, 2025
GREEN

TMG Automotive and Haartz Corporation to Invest in U.S. Manufacturing Facility in North Carolina for Automotive Interior Surface Materials

June 30, 2025
SCANDINAVIA&BALTICS

Exclusive: Startups and VCs call on EU to pause AI Act rollout

June 30, 2025

ItaHub

Crypto-assets supervision rules in Italy, Banca d’Italia will supervise payment systems and Consob on market abuse

Crypto-assets supervision rules in Italy, Banca d’Italia will supervise payment systems and Consob on market abuse

November 4, 2024
Italy’s SMEs export toward 260 bn euros in 2025

Italy’s SMEs export toward 260 bn euros in 2025

September 9, 2024
With two months to go before the NPL Directive, in Italy the securitization rebus is still to be unraveled

With two months to go before the NPL Directive, in Italy the securitization rebus is still to be unraveled

April 23, 2024
EU’s AI Act, like previous rules on technology,  looks more defensive than investment-oriented

EU’s AI Act, like previous rules on technology, looks more defensive than investment-oriented

January 9, 2024

Co-sponsor

Premium

Funds vying for management consulting firm BIP, a CVC portfolio company. All deals in the sector

Funds vying for management consulting firm BIP, a CVC portfolio company. All deals in the sector

March 6, 2025
Private equity, Italy 2024 closes with 588 deals as for investments and divestments from 549 in 2023. Here is the new BeBeez’s report

Private equity, Italy 2024 closes with 588 deals as for investments and divestments from 549 in 2023. Here is the new BeBeez’s report

February 10, 2025
Crypto-assets supervision rules in Italy, Banca d’Italia will supervise payment systems and Consob on market abuse

Crypto-assets supervision rules in Italy, Banca d’Italia will supervise payment systems and Consob on market abuse

November 4, 2024
Venture capital investments top €1.3bn in 208 rounds as of Sep30  in Italy. They were €1.5 in all 2023. The new BeBeez Report

Venture capital investments top €1.3bn in 208 rounds as of Sep30 in Italy. They were €1.5 in all 2023. The new BeBeez Report

October 28, 2024
Next Post

Exicom to Acquire Industry Leader Tritium; Expands Global Footprint in EV Charging

Ÿnsect raised over $600m on a hugely ambitious bet. Now, it needs to start making serious money

EdiBeez srl

C.so Italia 22 - 20122 - Milano
C.F. | P.IVA 09375120962
Aut. Trib. Milano n. 102
del 3 aprile 2013

COUNTRY

Italy
Iberia
France
UK&Ireland
Benelux
DACH
Scandinavia&Baltics

CATEGORY

Private Equity
Venture Capital
Private Debt
Distressed Assets
Real Estate
Fintech
Green

PREMIUM

ItaHUB
Legal
Tax
Trend
Report
Insight view

WHO WE ARE

About Us
Media Partnerships
Contact

INFORMATION

Privacy Policy
Terms&Conditions
Cookie Police

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • COUNTRY
    • ITALY
    • IBERIA
    • FRANCE
    • UK&IRELAND
    • BENELUX
    • DACH
    • SCANDINAVIA&BALTICS
  • PRIVATE EQUITY
  • VENTURE CAPITAL
  • PRIVATE DEBT
  • DISTRESSED ASSETS
  • REAL ESTATE
  • FINTECH
  • GREEN
  • PREMIUM
    • ItaHub
      • ItaHub Legal
      • ItaHub Tax
      • ItaHub Trend
    • REPORT
    • INSIGHT VIEW
    • Private Data
Subscribe
  • Login
  • Cart