The United States is investing heavily in semiconductors, artificial intelligence and advanced manufacturing. China continues to direct enormous resources toward strategic industries. Across Europe, governments are searching for ways to strengthen technological sovereignty and industrial resilience.
The argument is straightforward. Invest more, or risk falling behind. Perhaps they are right. But the debate raises a second question that receives far less attention.
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Most people know Airbus as a manufacturer of commercial aircraft. They see passenger jets, airline fleets and competition with Boeing. Yet aviation is only the visible outcome of a much larger project.
Airbus was created to solve a challenge that Europe continues to face today. How can nations maintain strategic industrial capabilities when the scale required to compete exceeds the capacity of any single state?
The answer was not simply to build aircraft. The answer was to build capability.
For much of the twentieth century, the global aviation industry was dominated by American manufacturers. Individual European countries possessed world-class engineers, universities and industrial expertise, but none possessed the domestic market or financial scale required to compete alone. To accept this imbalance would have meant accepting technological dependence.
Instead, Europe pursued a different experiment. Countries that were often economic competitors agreed to share investment, distribute production and coordinate industrial strategy across borders. Wings would be built in one country, fuselage sections in another and final assembly elsewhere. What emerged was not merely a company, but a new model for organising industrial power.
Airbus became an institutional response to fragmentation. It transformed national capabilities into continental capability.
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Money is everywhere. People earn it, spend it, save it and invest it. Yet most discussions about finance focus on familiar institutions such as banks, markets and financial products. Important as these may be, they often obscure a deeper question. How do modern societies organise trust?
Every economic transaction ultimately depends upon confidence. Confidence that money will retain value. Confidence that payments will be processed. Confidence that savings remain accessible. Confidence that financial institutions will continue to function during periods of uncertainty.
For decades, Europe’s financial system provided much of this stability through a combination of public institutions, private banks, regulatory frameworks and central banking. Together, these organisations created an architecture that allowed economic activity to take place across societies containing hundreds of millions of people. Yet the financial environment is changing.
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Norway is often associated with oil, gas and extraordinary national wealth. Yet its deeper achievement may lie elsewhere. Through long-term planning, strong institutions and one of the world’s largest sovereign wealth funds, Norway has demonstrated how resource wealth can be transformed into resilience for future generations.
Sweden is often recognised for companies such as IKEA, Ericsson, Spotify, Klarna and Saab. Yet the country’s deeper strength lies in something broader: an innovation ecosystem built upon education, research, trust and long-term investment in human capital. Sweden demonstrates that innovation is not simply an economic activity—it is a societal capability.
Algorithms excel at predicting what people are likely to buy. Physical environments excel at something different: creating trust, discovery and confidence. As retail becomes increasingly digital, the human experience of shopping may become more valuable, not less.
Most people use digital technologies every day, yet few fully understand the systems operating behind the screen. Through exhibitions, educational programmes and public engagement initiatives, Tactical Tech helps people explore how algorithms, data and artificial intelligence increasingly shape everyday life.