Opinion
Digital Innovation
"Build with Europe" is the Path Forward to Competitiveness and Digital Sovereignty
“Build with Europe” is “Buy European” enhanced with free trade, a strategy that promotes European competitiveness while strengthening digital sovereignty.
March 4, 2026

Christophe Carugati
Founder
“Buy European” is coming. On 4 March, the European Commission has released its Industrial Accelerator Act, which aims to favour European firms in publicly funded projects across strategic sectors. The objective is clear: boosting European competitiveness by creating demand for domestic firms and ensuring digital sovereignty by reducing reliance on non-European suppliers.
In turbulent geopolitical times, the proposal is politically tempting. Europe lags behind the United States and China, both of which operate their own buy-local regimes. If they do it, Europe should do the same. The logic appears straightforward.
It is also economically flawed.
Awarding contracts based on origin rather than merit risks depriving Europe of world-class innovation. Europe’s openness has long been a strength. By keeping its market open, it has attracted leading global firms, which have created local jobs, invested in infrastructure, and delivered innovative products and services to European businesses and citizens. This is free trade at its best: openness that raises standards and fuels competition.
Yet openness comes with a cost: dependency.
The Commission has identified strategic dependencies in sectors such as batteries, active pharmaceutical ingredients, clean hydrogen, semiconductors, and cloud and edge technologies. In a perfectly functioning, rules-based international order, such dependency would not be problematic. Countries specialise in what they do best and trade for the rest — the logic of David Ricardo’s theory of comparative advantage.
But the international order is no longer perfectly functioning.
In this environment, dependencies create vulnerabilities. External shocks, such as the COVID-19 crisis, expose the European economy to access restrictions on critical inputs. Following the pandemic, European leaders launched “de-risking” strategies. The European Chips Act, designed to strengthen Europe’s semiconductor capacity after a global shortage, is a clear example of such a strategy.
More recently, vulnerabilities stem not only from shocks but from deliberate foreign policies. At the World Economic Forum in Davos, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney described the rupture of the rules-based order in stark terms: “[…] great powers have begun using economic integration as weapons, tariffs as leverage, financial infrastructure as coercion, supply chains as vulnerabilities to be exploited.
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