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Washington D.C., not Silicon Valley, is the true "capital of venture capital." Core innovations like the Internet (Pentagon), GPS (military), Siri (Uncle Sam), and Google Earth (CIA) were all incubated with government funding long before private VCs became involved.
The "Genesis Mission" aims to use national labs' data and supercomputers for AI-driven science. This initiative marks a potential strategic shift away from the prevailing tech belief that breakthroughs like AGI will emerge exclusively from private corporations, reasserting a key role for government-led R&D in fundamental innovation.
An effectively managed sovereign wealth fund within the US government is making strategic and profitable investments in key technology companies like MP Materials and Intel. Spearheaded by entities within the DOD, this fund is cutting hard deals that benefit American taxpayers, suggesting a model for future public-private partnerships.
Despite a public image of libertarian self-reliance, the VC industry's success is built on government support. This includes leveraging state-funded R&D (the internet), lobbying for favorable tax laws (carried interest), and accessing pension funds through legal changes.
The most effective government role in innovation is to act as a catalyst for high-risk, foundational R&D (like DARPA creating the internet). Once a technology is viable, the government should step aside to allow private sector competition (like SpaceX) to drive down costs and accelerate progress.
In-Q-Tel, a nonprofit VC associated with the CIA, provides the early-stage equity funding that breakthrough technologies need to survive. This model successfully addresses a market failure where traditional VCs won't invest and government loans are unsuitable for tech startups.
Buttigieg argues the government's essential function is investing in foundational, high-risk ideas like the internet or basic research. These ventures have massive potential but don't offer the short-term returns or clear monetization paths required by the private sector due to market failures.
Tech companies often use government and military contracts as a proving ground to refine complex technologies. This gives military personnel early access to tools, like Palantir a decade ago, long before they become mainstream in the corporate world.
A16z frames its "American Dynamism" portfolio, which invests in national interest sectors, as the "child coming to teach the parent." It aims to re-inject Silicon Valley's rapid innovation model back into the government, the very entity that fostered Silicon Valley's original culture post-WWII.
Contrary to the last 20 years of tension, Silicon Valley's history is deeply intertwined with the U.S. national mission. From the 1950s to the 1990s, a tight alliance with defense and government agencies was standard, making the recent hostility a historical aberration that is now correcting itself.
A significant, under-the-radar shift has occurred in venture capital: the U.S. government is now a key partner and co-investor in early-stage deep tech. Firms like Voyager Ventures report that nearly half their portfolio companies have government deals, with entities like In-Q-Tel becoming frequent co-investors, marking a new era of public-private collaboration.