Found at: http://www.competitiveness.org/article/articleprint/666/-1/9/
French Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin announced plans in July to spend 1.8 billion US dollars on 63 industrial projects spanning from aerospace to medicine.
This effort focuses on creating rivals to hubs like Cambridge in Britain and Silicon Valley in California, where academic researchers mix with entrepreneurs. More than 100 applicants entered proposals for funding, a combination of tax cuts and other credits for research and development, to be doled out between 2006 and 2008.
In past years France has been struggling to stay globally competitive at a time of rapid industrial change. Many businesses find it increasingly cheaper to make products and deliver services by setting up abroad.
France has focused more than any other European country on using state resources, including funds from privatizations, to finance next-generation industries.The funding includes 365 million US dollars in tax breaks, 487 million US dollars in government loans and at least 973 million US dollars in new grants and subsidies from state research and innovation agencies.
The French government identified six projects as ''global contenders'' eligible for priority support: