In the previous post, linked above, I argued that Europe’s technological humiliation is not the result of insufficient talent, but of its refusal to give talent the power to matter. The continent trains exceptional researchers, deprives them of the compute, capital and scale needed to compete, and then acts surprised when the United States absorbs them. But emigration is only the end of the betrayal. Long before Europe loses researchers across the Atlantic, it abandons many at home — by reserving the laboratories, networks, investment and institutional advantages that make innovation possible for regions rich enough to possess them.
More competition, more entrepreneurship, more innovation: the familiar Brussels catechism. But the sermon collapses the moment one asks where this supposedly meritocratic machinery actually works. The relationship between third-party funding and university patenting is strongest in Europe’s richest regions, weaker in middle-income ones, and negligible in the poorest. In other words, the funding system does not level the field; it pours further advantage into the regions already equipped with laboratories, industrial partners, investors, networks and prestige.
Europe calls it excellence. In practice, it is accumulated advantage receiving another instalment. The numbers expose the underlying obscenity. The concentration is not merely uncomfortable; it is grotesque. Universities in just five countries — Germany, the UK, France, Belgium and Switzerland — account for more than 70% of all direct patent application, while 73% of the universities examined filed no direct patents at all.
This is the missing half of Europe's talent story. The continent concentrates opportunity in a narrow core, leaves everyone else to compete in a game whose decisive assets were handed out long before the whistle, and then acts surprised when its most ambitious researchers — having found that even Europe's privileged core cannot match the scale on offer in California — leave the continent altogether. Talent flows uphill at every level: from the periphery to the core, and from the core to America.
The mechanism is brutally simple. Poorer regions are told to compete harder in a system whose laboratories, industrial partners, venture capital, reputations and grant-winning machinery are already concentrated among the winners. When the periphery predictably struggles, it is lectured about ambition and entrepreneurial culture. And the winners applaud. Europe has built one of its most elegant, deeply cynical and politically useful machines: a device for laundering inherited advantage through the vocabulary of merit. Historical concentration becomes competitive success. Institutional wealth becomes performance. Regional privilege becomes innovation policy. And geography, at last, is renamed excellence.
PS - My own country offers a revolting illustration of how Europe betrays its peripheral talent. Portugal uses scarce public money to train scientists such as Cristiana Pires, Fábio Rosa and Filipe Pereira — only for a system rigged in favour of Europe’s rich core where they can build an innovative cancer-biotech company worth tens of millions of euros. The poor periphery pays for the brains; the wealthy core captures the company, the investment, the qualified jobs and the wealth. Europe calls it scientific mobility. The honest name is organised extraction: rich countries becoming richer by absorbing the future of poorer ones. https://19-pacheco-torgal-19.blogspot.com/2026/04/uma-brilhante-estrategia-portuguesa.html