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Why the 2025 Nobel Prize in Economics matters for innovation policy

Note: The research careers for this year’s triple winners support the underlying arguments for public involvement in technology-based economic development. Well-designed and sustained public-private regional innovation initiatives—the work of SSTI and its member organizations—can make a positive difference for local competitiveness.

Statewide strategies are preparing for the new federal policy and funding landscape

As states strive to strengthen their science, technology, innovation, and entrepreneurship programs during an uncertain federal funding period, many are developing strategic plans that provide a roadmap for doing so. SSTI has recently seen examples of plans from West Virginia, Arizona, and California. 

Declining quarterly investment numbers may be an early indication of a larger trend

The Q3 2025 investment data is in, and trends of fewer deals and more dollars continue. With CrunchBase pointing to a record share of funding going to rounds larger than $100 million, SSTI continues to review the deals in PitchBook under that size to uncover trends masked by the high end of the market to uncover trends masked by the high end of the market.

Useful Stats: Business R&D continues to consolidate in top states

With federal R&D investments unlikely to keep pace with inflation or international competition based on the administration’s budget request, cuts to existing research grants, and Congress’s inability to pass a budget, business R&D investments become more critical for sustaining the competitiveness of regional innovation economies. Trends evident in new data released by the National Science Foundation point to areas of potential concern or need for state TBED policy attention and potential adjustment: business R&D is growing even more concentrated geographically, and for many areas of the country business investments likely are not growing at a sufficient pace to maintain the regions’ innovation capacity. 

In 2023, just four states comprised 54% of the nation’s domestic business R&D expenditures, a sharp increase from being less than 45% in 2014, SSTI analysis of new Business Enterprise Research and Development (BERD) survey data reveals. The consolidation of BERD expenditures in the top states may lead one to think that less R&D is occurring outside of the largest states, but this is not the case; 24 jurisdictions doubled BERD expenditures in the past decade, with all but one state increasing total expenditures. Adjusted for inflation, however, reveals a more modest nine jurisdictions doubled their business R&D activities, while all but five increased. These trends and more are explored in this edition of Useful Stats.

ITIF warns that deep R&D cuts could have long-term economic impacts


In a Digest article published May 8, 2025, SSTI outlined how the proposed White House 2026 discretionary budget proposal, which aims to cut non-defense discretionary funding by 22.6%, could impact TBED programs. In that article, we laid out some specifics of how the cuts were anticipated to affect key U.S. research-funding bodies. In a recent report from The Information Technology & Innovation Foundation (ITIF), Meghan Ostertag, compares four scenarios to estimate a variety of potential losses to the U.S. from 2026 to 2035 that would result from reduced federal R&D spending levels, with the second through fourth scenarios presented as benchmarks compared to the first scenario. The scenarios are described below.…

VC data highlights what types of deals are slowing early-stage investment activity

Long concentrated geographically, venture capital also is growing more concentrated in a small number of larger deals, as SSTI has reported in recent Digest issues. In fact, deals under $100 million—not a small figure in itself—have fallen by 71% according to SSTI’s analysis of PitchBook data. Even more troubling is evidence showing deals under $100 million are moving to later-stage investment and away from early-stage companies. The trend, SSTI believes, should be of concern for nonprofit venture development organizations as well as TBED policy makers and regional stakeholders working to keep their local economies competitive through innovation-driven entrepreneurship. This shift in private capital market behavior may have negative impacts on company survival rates, downstream economic growth opportunities, and the long-term competitiveness of U.S. industry.

Recent Research: Are SBIR-funded inventions more likely to make it to market?

Commercializing patented inventions is a common goal of innovation policy, as it drives company revenues and regional economic growth. However, tracking the commercialization of inventions stemming from R&D is challenging. While programs like the Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) program are explicitly designed to encourage commercialization, most evaluation tools rely on approaches that may be anecdotal or incomplete, such as surveys, case studies, or patent counts. A working paper by Carlo Bottai, Gaétan de Rassenfosse, and Emilio Raiteri proposes a new web-based methodology for detecting commercialization, offering a potentially more objective, real-time way to gauge the return on public innovation investments. It might prove a useful tool for state TBED programs that support R&D grants, research centers, and university-industry research collaboration.