Biotechnology and governance in Australia and Sweden: path dependency or instutional convergence?
Version 2 2024-06-13, 07:39Version 2 2024-06-13, 07:39
Version 1 2014-10-27, 16:29Version 1 2014-10-27, 16:29
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-13, 07:39authored byH Lofgren, M Benner
The development of new generic technologies occurs within traditional structures of industry-government interaction, but also unleashes a process of 'creative destruction' generating new institutional patterns. This article, focusing on biotechnology, describes and compares policy processes and institutional arrangements in Australia and Sweden. The Swedish biotechnology sector displays a pattern of fragmentation and relatively weak state steering. Australia, by contrast, has implemented a set of comparatively coordinated regulatory and other measures to foster the growth of biotechnology. This observation contradicts the characterisation of Sweden as a 'strong state' economy, and challenges the depiction of Australia as lacking in state steering capacity. The relative open-endedness of the search in these countries for a mode of regulation of biotechnology suggests that the role of the state in economic restructuring today is fundamentally distinct from that of earlier periods.