观点硅谷

A spikier world for innovative start-ups beckons

To generalise heroically, two big stories have been told about the geography of innovation. The first, popularised by the New York Times columnist Tom Friedman, is that the world is flat: modern technology is so cheap and connected that anybody with internet access can invent a product or service that can scale globally.

The second, articulated by Professor Richard Florida from the University of Toronto, is that the world is spiky: innovation takes place in relatively few metropolitan areas, often clustered around a powerful company or university.

Although these stories appear to be contradictory, they may be simultaneously true. Technology may have democratised access to knowledge, enabling a poor teenager in Lucknow to dream up a potentially world-beating idea. But the ability to turn that idea into a global business still depends on networks of people, finance, and organisational resources that remain highly concentrated.

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