---
product_id: 61543114
title: "The Entrepreneurial State: 10th anniversary edition updated with a new preface"
price: "KD 8.28"
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---

# The Entrepreneurial State: 10th anniversary edition updated with a new preface

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## Description

The Entrepreneurial State: 10th anniversary edition updated with a new preface : Mazzucato, Mariana, Mazzucato, Mariana: desertcart.co.uk: Books

Review: Important and Refreshing new approach - This is an important book. Mariana Mazzucato persuasively argues that the state has a key entrepreneurial role in technical development and innovation and development. She contends that the central role that the State has played in kick starting the IT and pharmaceutical sectors in the US and the green technologies in Germany and China and the auto industry in Japan has not been adequately recognized and cannot be contested. Conventional theory is that the State 's role is to establish and enforce the rules of the game, to keep a level playing field, to build public goods such as infrastructure, defence, and basic research and to devise mechanisms to mitigate negative externalities such as pollution. If the state intervenes beyond that it is accused of picking winners. It should be up to private industry to innovate. But Mazzucato believes that the history of technological change teaches us that choosing particular sectors by the State is absolutely crucial. She contends that in practice the State in the US, and especially in China and Japan, has invested heavily in going way beyond basic research in providing for the explosion of innovation in certain sectors. She examines post-war period two US government agencies. The Defence Advanced Projects Agency (DARPA) was created in 1957 for space research as a panic induced reaction to the Soviets successful launch of Sputnik. But DARPA also included money for "blue sky thinking" which contributed heavily to semiconductor and the internet development. Then through the Small Business Innovation Research Programme heavily funded the development of companies like Apple and Google. Similarly, the US National Institute of Health invested heavily in R and D in the pharmaceutical sectors and also provided the ecosystem of innovation including loans, grants and government contracts. But she identifies a major problem in the West that when the State does invest in basic research and development and creates an ecosystem of innovation in any selected sector, one of the unfortunate consequences of modern-day capitalism is that risks are socialized and rewards are privatized. One of the refreshing aspects of the book are the practical policy recommendations that emanate. For example, to address her perceived issue of socialized risk and private reward, any loans or grants to private companies from the state should be repayable in the event of success, or States should take equity stakes in companies they help. The argument that tax recompenses States in returning them reward for their investment is undermined by the footloose nature of the Apples, Google's and pharmaceutical companies that allows them to play off one country against another. Mariana does not have an answer to this and prefers direct recompense through loan repayment or equity shares. China and Japan have been much more systematic in "sector selection". Their form of capitalism provides for the state sharing the rewards. There is no doubt that the State's role in technological development is underrated and subject to prejudice. My problem with Mariana's forceful advocacy of the role of the state - her belief that the state's responsibility goes beyond planting seeds via R and D at public institutions and must support technologies until they can be mass produced - is highlighted by her account of the experience of solar and wind industries where China outcompeted the US, Japan and European rivals. Heavy investment by these governments was not rewarded by thriving industries. The clear and proven historical risk is that sectors are picked for political reasons or for fashionable reasons, like wind and solar, and taxpayers shoulder risk but do not share rewards. Mariana’s answer to this is the state should accept that risk but ensure that the existing system of socializing risk (i.e. born by the state) but privatizing rewards is overturned. It is the only way the innovation cycle will be sustainable over time both economically and politically. I would applaud such an action. But since the stock market crash in 2008 is there any evidence that the UK State can effectively retain access to reward having shouldered the burden of the risk incurred by RBS and others? If we can address this then I would wholeheartedly support Mariana’s argument. You can see I found the book immensely stimulating!
Review: Not for faint hearted but well worth reading. - Heavy stuff. Understood first pages with ease then right into heavy concepts. Can manage it but reminds me of why I dropped economics at university.

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| ASIN  | 0141986107 |
| Best Sellers Rank | 45,959 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) 136 in Starting a Business 7,086 in Society, Politics & Philosophy |
| Customer reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (797) |
| Dimensions  | 12.8 x 1.7 x 19.7 cm |
| Edition  | 1st |
| ISBN-10  | 9780141986104 |
| ISBN-13  | 978-0141986104 |
| Item weight  | 224 g |
| Language  | English |
| Print length  | 304 pages |
| Publication date  | 22 Mar. 2018 |
| Publisher  | Penguin |

## Images

![The Entrepreneurial State: 10th anniversary edition updated with a new preface - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71ipKD6fZKL.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Important and Refreshing new approach
*by M***N on 31 December 2018*

This is an important book. Mariana Mazzucato persuasively argues that the state has a key entrepreneurial role in technical development and innovation and development. She contends that the central role that the State has played in kick starting the IT and pharmaceutical sectors in the US and the green technologies in Germany and China and the auto industry in Japan has not been adequately recognized and cannot be contested. Conventional theory is that the State 's role is to establish and enforce the rules of the game, to keep a level playing field, to build public goods such as infrastructure, defence, and basic research and to devise mechanisms to mitigate negative externalities such as pollution. If the state intervenes beyond that it is accused of picking winners. It should be up to private industry to innovate. But Mazzucato believes that the history of technological change teaches us that choosing particular sectors by the State is absolutely crucial. She contends that in practice the State in the US, and especially in China and Japan, has invested heavily in going way beyond basic research in providing for the explosion of innovation in certain sectors. She examines post-war period two US government agencies. The Defence Advanced Projects Agency (DARPA) was created in 1957 for space research as a panic induced reaction to the Soviets successful launch of Sputnik. But DARPA also included money for "blue sky thinking" which contributed heavily to semiconductor and the internet development. Then through the Small Business Innovation Research Programme heavily funded the development of companies like Apple and Google. Similarly, the US National Institute of Health invested heavily in R and D in the pharmaceutical sectors and also provided the ecosystem of innovation including loans, grants and government contracts. But she identifies a major problem in the West that when the State does invest in basic research and development and creates an ecosystem of innovation in any selected sector, one of the unfortunate consequences of modern-day capitalism is that risks are socialized and rewards are privatized. One of the refreshing aspects of the book are the practical policy recommendations that emanate. For example, to address her perceived issue of socialized risk and private reward, any loans or grants to private companies from the state should be repayable in the event of success, or States should take equity stakes in companies they help. The argument that tax recompenses States in returning them reward for their investment is undermined by the footloose nature of the Apples, Google's and pharmaceutical companies that allows them to play off one country against another. Mariana does not have an answer to this and prefers direct recompense through loan repayment or equity shares. China and Japan have been much more systematic in "sector selection". Their form of capitalism provides for the state sharing the rewards. There is no doubt that the State's role in technological development is underrated and subject to prejudice. My problem with Mariana's forceful advocacy of the role of the state - her belief that the state's responsibility goes beyond planting seeds via R and D at public institutions and must support technologies until they can be mass produced - is highlighted by her account of the experience of solar and wind industries where China outcompeted the US, Japan and European rivals. Heavy investment by these governments was not rewarded by thriving industries. The clear and proven historical risk is that sectors are picked for political reasons or for fashionable reasons, like wind and solar, and taxpayers shoulder risk but do not share rewards. Mariana’s answer to this is the state should accept that risk but ensure that the existing system of socializing risk (i.e. born by the state) but privatizing rewards is overturned. It is the only way the innovation cycle will be sustainable over time both economically and politically. I would applaud such an action. But since the stock market crash in 2008 is there any evidence that the UK State can effectively retain access to reward having shouldered the burden of the risk incurred by RBS and others? If we can address this then I would wholeheartedly support Mariana’s argument. You can see I found the book immensely stimulating!

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Not for faint hearted but well worth reading.
*by P***R on 17 July 2019*

Heavy stuff. Understood first pages with ease then right into heavy concepts. Can manage it but reminds me of why I dropped economics at university.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Superb...
*by O***S on 6 November 2017*

If we believe much of what passes for the political narrative of the last 40 years it would be easy to imagine that it is the state that stifles innovation, restricts enterprise and burdens citizens and businesses with unnecessary regulation, wasteful expenditure and life sapping tax policies. As with every argument, there may be some truth there, lurking in the intellectual undergrowth, but how much of it is a shaky justification for perpetuating the currently socially injurious power relations? What the Left and indeed the Centre Right in British politics has needed a core of ideas and beliefs (as well as credible historical examples /policy ideas)that can justify the idea that the role of the state in the politico eco-system is vital to the future growth and prosperity of the economy. This rigorously researched, tightly argued, accessible book is indeed a sturdy intellectual platform for those readers who feel that free markets are only part of the story in the way that the modern economy functions. Readers of a more Libertarian hue, will also have much to ponder here. Understanding the role of state and its promotion of enterprise and innovation will undoubtedly turn more than a few heads! Here are some of the core ideas: Industry – farming, consumer electronics, construction, aviation, banking to name but a few has always relied upon sought state intervention in one form or another: subsidy, protectionist policies, ‘bailing out’, tax breaks, incentives, regulatory frame works and so on. The corporate world likes government when it is acting in the interests of business but the tone changes when some degree of reciprocity or responsibility is required. Engineering firms, chemical producers, capital goods producers, defence contractors have regularly get to taste the honey of public largesse, sometimes just to keep capacity or expertise ( see shipyards) available. The drug industry of course has a major customer in the form of the NHS. Business needs government in times of recession to exercise its influence in the economy via expansionary fiscal and monetary policies. The only problem is of course, corporations are notoriously adept at managing their revenue flows to reduce their tax liabilities to negligible proportions whilst taking full advantage of all the opportunities that operating in an advanced economy such as the UK offers. Primary research is essentially a public good. Mazzucato suggests that companies such as Apple benefit from research undertaken elsewhere. The genius of Steve Jobs was to harness ideas (such as touchscreen technology) and incorporate them into a pleasing consumer products. This is product development rather than the sort of research that can lead to fundamental shifts in technology or scientific understanding such as provided by nuclear research or the development of the internet. Research has become increasingly from state sponsorship and the activities of universities, not corporations. The private sector takes advantage of such research without paying their due. The state fosters enterprise, it creates opportunities for business, it educates citizens, and it can create new markets (green power). The state can do so much more then be a market gatekeeper and corrector of market failures. In short, markets need government. What government has to do is gain expertise, be prepared to ‘fail’ sometimes and become more confident in the way that it can motivate markets to think more long term and be more socially responsible. Theresa May is already thinking along these lines her ideas on a UK industrial strategy. What I have described above is but a few of the ideas that Mariana Mazzucato outlines in this invigorating book. Read it and see what more of interest there is to glean. Highly recommended.

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*Last updated: 2026-05-18*