{"id":20607,"date":"2019-01-17T19:17:39","date_gmt":"2019-01-17T18:17:39","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/dataconomy.ru\/?p=20607"},"modified":"2019-01-17T23:11:01","modified_gmt":"2019-01-17T22:11:01","slug":"what-is-driving-europes-tech-economy","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/dataconomy.ru\/2019\/01\/17\/what-is-driving-europes-tech-economy\/","title":{"rendered":"What is driving Europe\u2019s tech economy?"},"content":{"rendered":"\n
Here is what \u201cThe State of European Tech 2018\u201d, a data-driven analytical report by Atomico reveals about the factors that are accelerating the growth of tech in the European economy<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n The comparison of Europe\u2019s tech scene with Silicon Valley in the U.S and Asia (particularly China) has been a topic of debate for long criticising not only the lack of consumer-tech companies in Amidst this cynicism, there are numbers which tell a story of constant progress in the European tech economy and break many myths of the past. Lack of VC funding is not a problem anymore and tech workforce in EU is on the rise. The State of European Tech 2018, <\/em>a data-driven analytical report by Atomico states that while Europe\u2019s overall economy and traditional industries are stuck in the doldrums, booming tech represents the best hope for growth. Tech firms are powering job creation and ambitious founders are tackling some of the world\u2019s biggest problems. All of that has members of the ecosystem optimistic – except in the U.K. where sentiment is not at the same levels as elsewhere. Some of the key findings of the report mention:<\/strong> Chris Grew, Partner, Technology Companies, Group Orrick says, \u201cThere has been a nearly five-fold growth in European venture capital investment in the last five years. There are five times the number of unicorns \u2013 with at least 17 new billion dollar plus companies added in the past year alone. The European tech sector has produced nearly four times the job growth rate of the general economy, resulting in a talent pool of programmers and STEM researchers surpassing that of the United States. At Orrick, we see it in our practice every day as we have helped founders, investors and corporate venture clients raise or deploy more than $3.7 billion across Europe over the past year.\u201d He mentions that as a global tech law firm, they are not surprised to see investors from around the world chasing strong returns from their European investments. While U.S. investment returned to 2016 levels after another record-breaking performance last year, investment from Asia continued to grow.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Here are the factors (according to the report) driving this high growth for European tech: <\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n Powering Workforce Growth<\/strong> Tom Wehmeier, Partner, Atomico says, \u201cLast year we found that Europe was experiencing a \u2018Battle Royale\u2019 for talent. This year was the year Europe figured out how to effectively mobilise its deep pools of talent. The tech sector is attracting more participants – whether measured by the healthy increase in professional developers or the uptick in talented executives moving into tech from other sectors. What is interesting is that the developer pool is growing fastest outside those countries that have historically attracted the most investment: Turkey, Spain and Russia\u2019s pool of developers have been deepening the most rapidly. All this will lead to a massive potential upside for the wider European economy as capital eventually grows into these new communities,\u201d he says.
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