Could Spain Finally Be About to Join the 21st Century?

Becoming a chip-manufacturing hub makes a lot of sense for the country

Enrique Dans
Marker

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A close-up of a chip
Photo by Ryan on Unsplash

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez’s €11 billion strategic plan for economic recovery and transformation (PERTE), which aims to encourage the domestic manufacture of chips and semiconductors — announced on Tuesday at the Wake Up Spain forum in Madrid, organized by leading daily El Español — has highlighted the long-standing need to modernize the country’s productive fabric.

Attracting the semiconductor industry to Spain is an ambitious idea, and one that many countries share; what’s more, Spain is at a disadvantage. Three or four decades ago, while our country was focused on construction, another economy then similar to ours in size and with a similar-sized population, South Korea, instead staked its future on technology and semiconductors. The facts speak for themselves: in 2000, Spain’s GDP still exceeded that of South Korea, but over the last 20 years, while Spain has contracted on four occasions, South Korea has maintained an upward trend, and today, after overtaking Spain in 2013, its economy is the 10th-largest in the world. This evolution is no coincidence, and reflects the fact that technology has become the most important variable conditioning an economy, in more and more ways.

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Enrique Dans
Enrique Dans

Written by Enrique Dans

Professor of Innovation at IE Business School and blogger (in English here and in Spanish at enriquedans.com)

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