For Europe to emulate Silicon Valley’s tech success, it should change its startup funding model
- Written by Michaela Hruskova, Lecturer in Entrepreneurship, University of Stirling
Tech startups will be enthused by the news that[1] Silicon Valley venture capital (VC) veteran General Catalyst is on the verge of raising US$6 billion (£4.8 billion) for backing new companies. It comes hot on the heels of an announcement from[2] Andreessen Horowitz, another major VC, of a new US$7.2 billion investment fund. These are among the largest fundraisings in years, coming at a time when the VC sector has been going through a lull[3], with worldwide total investments down from US$644 billion in 2021 to US$286 billion in 2023.
The bad news, depending on where you live, is that most of the proceeds are likely to be invested Stateside. American startups mop up around half of all global VC funding, while Europe and the UK are lucky to see a quarter. This is despite the fact that Europe[4] and the UK[5] have a slightly larger share of world GDP than the US[6] (17% v 16%).
VC investment by country (US$)