Abstract
In a search for Schumpeterian solutions, the Obama Administration has made venture capital a cornerstone of its Clean Technology policy, adopting a strategy of providing large loan guarantees to a
few venture capital-financed firms. This article argues that three key conditions are necessary for
venture capital to successfully open new economic spaces and then it applies them to assess the viability
of venture capital investment in clean technology. The article concludes that large loan guarantees
are unlikely to be effective. Other government policies such as SBIR grants, university R&D
support, certain (de)regulatory actions, large-scale demonstration projects, and/or procurement
decisions can better encourage both incremental and Schumpeterian innovation without distorting
the turbulent dynamics of newmarket creation. This analysis can also be applied to other sector- and
market-specific innovation policies.