Macro–Meso–Micro: An Integrative Framework for Evolutionary Economics and Sustainable Transitions
Abstract
1. Introduction: Evolution of Economic Thought and the Emergence of Multi-Level Analysis
2. Historical Foundations of Evolutionary Economics
“The Mecca of the economist lies in economic biology rather than in economic dynamics.”—Alfred Marshall, Principles of Economics [1]
3. The Macro–Meso–Micro Framework
“The distinction between microeconomics and macroeconomics will blur and disappear. This distinction, which, to remind, was the legacy of Keynes, gave responsibility for overall economic performance to the state and the central bank, leaving the traditional role of the classical market to the individual sectors of the economy. Inflation and unemployment were for macroeconomic attention; if they were thereby controlled, the microeconomic performance of the market could be left in firm descent from classical orthodoxy. The compartmentalization of economics between microeconomics and macroeconomics hides the most stubborn cause of present-day unemployment in the mature industrial countries: the decline of the older industries. And it also hides the relevant solutions.”—John Kenneth Galbraith, Economics in Perspective [12]
- Micro-level: Individual agents (firms and entrepreneurs) carry and adapt rules.
- Meso-level: Rule populations evolve through origination, adoption, and retention phases.
- Macro-level: Multiple rule populations interact to form complex system patterns.
- Origination (Meso 1): An imaginative agent invents or adopts first a novel rule.
- Adoption and adaptation (Meso 2): Wide diffusion, local tweaking, rivalry, and learning occur.
- Retention (Meso 3): The rule becomes normalized, maintained, and replicated.
4. Methodological Approach: The Integrative Review
5. Energy Transitions Through a Macro–Meso–Micro Lens
5.1. Macro: Geopolitics and the Re-Scaling of Energy Security
“The costs and benefits of openness are not symmetrical for all members of the system. The hegemonic state will have a preference for an open structure. Such a structure increases its aggregate national income. It also increases its rate of growth during its ascendency—that is, when its relative size and technological lead are increasing.”—Stephen D. Krasner, State Power and the Structure of International Trade [24]
5.2. Meso: Re-Wiring European Energy Ecosystems
“Biological examples are quite simply the most direct way to explain difficult systems concepts. Each time you master a biological example, you learn a systems concept that will be valuable for comprehending the dynamics of business in the new economy.”—James Moore, The Death of Competition [33]
5.3. Micro: Entrepreneurial “Physiologies” in Transition
“… we cannot define a caterpillar and then use the same definition for a butterfly.”Edith Tilton Penrose, The Theory of the Growth of the Firm [41]
6. Ecological Foundations of the Energy Transition
“By now, no one would deny that the economy of biological processes is governed by the Entropy Law, not by the laws of mechanics.”Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen, The Entropy Law and the Economic Process [46]
7. Towards a Multi-Level Policy Architecture: Institutes of Local Development and Innovation
“The first lesson of economics is scarcity: There is never enough quantity for some-thing to satisfy everyone who wants it. The first lesson of politics is to ignore the first lesson of economic science.”Thomas Sowell, Is Reality Optional? [51]
- Macro-level: Formulating inclusive national strategies and promoting public support mechanisms to encourage business innovation and growth in the industry through collaborative efforts between national ministries and bodies.
- Meso-level: Involving intermediate organizations such as incubators, accelerators, technology parks, chambers of commerce, banks, and investment funds to connect institutions, provide resources, and foster entrepreneurship in the industry.
- Micro-level: Delivering “free at the point of sale” consulting services through a “business clinic” model that offers direct, practical support to socioeconomic organizations, particularly those facing challenges, helping them create or improve business plans.
8. Discussion: The Macro–Meso–Micro Framework as Methodological Innovation
“Perhaps in the future it will become possible to build and comprehend models of industry evolution that are based on detailed and realistic models of individual firm behavior.”Richard Nelson and Sidney Winter, An Evolutionary Theory of Economic Change [10]
8.1. Bridging Isolated Knowledge Domains
8.2. Revealing Evolutionary Mechanisms at Work
8.3. Enriching the Framework of Dopfer, Foster, and Potts
8.4. Policy Coherence Across Multiple Levels
- At the macro-level, it aligns with national development strategies and international sustainability commitments.
- At the meso-level, it coordinates intermediary organizations to strengthen regional innovation ecosystems.
- At the micro-level, it provides direct support to individual businesses for enhancing their adaptive capabilities.
8.5. Beyond Competing Frameworks: Conceptual Advances and Remaining Challenges
9. Conclusions: Advancing an Integrative Paradigm for Sustainable Transitions
9.1. Key Findings and Contributions
9.2. Policy Implications
- Cooperation networks: Creating partnerships or joining energy cooperative organizations to share resources and knowledge.
- Digitalization: Adopting digital tools like cloud-based energy monitoring platforms to streamline operations without requiring major organizational changes.
- Targeted support: Working with ILDIs or similar institutions to receive tailored guidance for improving competitiveness and strategic prospects.
9.3. Limitations and Future Research Directions
- Temporal dynamics: Investigating how rule populations evolve over time and how the three levels interact through different phases of sustainability transitions.
- Comparative studies: Applying the framework to different regions and sectors to identify common patterns and context-specific factors.
- Quantitative modeling: Developing metrics and models that can capture evolutionary processes across all three levels, enabling more precise evaluation of policy interventions.
- Expanded policy experiments: Testing the ILDI concept and other multi-level interventions in diverse contexts to refine implementation approaches.
9.4. Concluding Reflections: From Analytical Tool to Transformative Perspective
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Chatzinikolaou, D.; Kubus, R. Macro–Meso–Micro: An Integrative Framework for Evolutionary Economics and Sustainable Transitions. Sustainability 2025, 17, 9480. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17219480
Chatzinikolaou D, Kubus R. Macro–Meso–Micro: An Integrative Framework for Evolutionary Economics and Sustainable Transitions. Sustainability. 2025; 17(21):9480. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17219480
Chicago/Turabian StyleChatzinikolaou, Dimos, and Renata Kubus. 2025. "Macro–Meso–Micro: An Integrative Framework for Evolutionary Economics and Sustainable Transitions" Sustainability 17, no. 21: 9480. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17219480
APA StyleChatzinikolaou, D., & Kubus, R. (2025). Macro–Meso–Micro: An Integrative Framework for Evolutionary Economics and Sustainable Transitions. Sustainability, 17(21), 9480. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17219480
