The world is going green. Sustainable technologies, such as renewable
energy and electric vehicles, are increasingly becoming part of our
daily life. This dissertation fills the ensuing gap by providing an
insight into the emerging German greentech industry, one of the largest
in the world. It develops an integrated and interdisciplinary
theoretical framework in which to assess the relationships between
innovation, growth and financing from a firm-level perspective; it then
tests this framework empirically. In essence, the study finds that: (1)
Innovative activity and corporate growth depend heavily on the
availability of capital. At the same time, it appears that particularly
innovative firms are more likely to face financial constraints. (2) A
lack of funds is very apparent for around a quarter of the firms
investigated and seems most severe in the early part of the growth
state, where firms focus on commercializing existing products. (3)
Government support programs only partially offset these effects