Skills Ecosystem Misalignment in Emerging Technology Sectors
Abstract
Purpose: This research investigates the misalignment between educational supply and industrial demand across emerging technology sectors in five European moderate innovator countries, aiming to understand why universities and firms struggle to co-produce the hybrid talent required for the digital transition.
Methodology/Approach: A mixed-methods comparative case study design was employed, combining desk research, focus groups, and semi-structured interviews across 35 country-sector cases in five countries and seven technology domains.
Findings: The analysis reveals a Coordination Failure Equilibrium where widespread awareness of gaps coexists with systemic inaction, highlighting severe deficits in soft skills and a critical theory-practice divide driven by a temporal mismatch between agile technology and rigid academic cycles.
Research Limitation/Implication: The findings imply that traditional degree structures are insufficient for the digital transition, necessitating a paradigm shift toward knowledge co-creation through Regional Centres of Vocational Excellence (CoVEs) and industry-validated micro-credentials.
Originality/Value of paper: This paper contributes a unique comparative analysis challenging linear human capital models by applying the Quintuple Innovation Helix framework to identify structural coordination failures rather than simple quantitative shortages.
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Authors
Copyright (c) 2026 Iveta Orbánová, Natasa Urbancikova

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