In recent years, startups have been widely promoted as engines of growth, innovation, and job creation, particularly in developing economies. Governments court venture capital, build innovation hubs, and celebrate technology entrepreneurs as symbols of modern progress. This has raised a deeper question: can startups realistically replace traditional industrialization as the foundation of long-term economic development?
Startups play an important role in introducing new ideas, improving efficiency, and solving narrow market problems. Digital platforms reduce transaction costs, financial technology expands access to services, and logistics startups streamline supply chains. These contributions can raise productivity across sectors and improve how existing economic systems function. In this sense, startups act as valuable accelerators within an economy. However, industrialization performs a fundamentally different task. Manufacturing and large-scale production absorb vast numbers of workers, including those with limited formal education. Factories generate stable wages, create export capacity, and build domestic expertise in engineering, operations, and quality control. These industries also stimulate supporting sectors such as transport, energy, raw materials, and vocational training. Startups, by contrast, tend to be small, capital-intensive, and dependent on specialized skills, employing relatively few people even when successful.
Another limitation lies in sustainability. Many startups rely heavily on external funding and prioritize rapid growth over long-term profitability. This model works in global capital markets with deep pools of risk finance, but it exposes economies to volatility when funding cycles reverse. Industrial firms, while slower to build, often create more durable production capacity that anchors long-term investment and tax revenue. For developing countries, the distinction matters. Youth unemployment, income inequality, and trade deficits cannot be solved through software platforms alone. Economies require industries that transform local resources into higher-value goods and integrate workers into formal production systems. Without this foundation, startups risk becoming isolated islands of innovation in economies that remain structurally fragile.
This does not mean startups are irrelevant to development. They complement industrialization by improving market access, financing, logistics, and management practices. Technology can raise the efficiency of factories, connect producers to customers, and reduce waste across value chains. The strongest development models therefore combine industrial expansion with entrepreneurial innovation.
Startups can modernize economies, but they cannot substitute the structural role of industrialization. Sustainable development requires both: factories to build scale and stability, and startups to inject flexibility and innovation. Treating one as a replacement for the other risks mistaking visibility for substance.














