Mercantilist and protectionist shocks on innovation, growth, and economic policy in European regions

We assess the potential innovation and growth implications on European regions of the rapid global shifts in political economy towards mercantilism, tariffs, and protectionism. The new trade shocks have the potential to reshape the geography of European innovation, and we examine the likely global value-chain implications on regional innovation in both STI-driven and DUI-driven regions using a unique EU-wide regional input–output database. 

The analyses undertaken here using the EU EUREGIO-FIGARO datasets allow us to incorporate not only the direct demand-transmission effects of international trade on different EU regions, but also the full trade-in-value-added logic, which also includes the indirect effects of GVCs spanning EU regions and non-EU countries. 

We demonstrate that both STI-driven and non-STI/DUI-driven regions are exposed in different ways to these trade shocks, and that Europe’s territorial innovation, growth, and development challenges are likely to become even more complicated in today’s global political context, depending on where regions are positioned in global value chains.

Authors

PBL Authors
Mark Thissen
Other authors
Philip McCann
Raquel Ortega-Argilés
Ming-Wei Hsu

Specifications

Publication title
Mercantilist and protectionist shocks on innovation, growth, and economic policy in European regions
Publication date
19 January 2026
Publication type
Article
Publication language
English
Magazine
Journal of Evolutionary Economics
Issue
Volume 36, article number 3, (2026)
Product number
6116