Innovation failure in a rule-of-law state is commonly explained by deficits of input — investment, skill, infrastructure — or of throughput, the efficiency with which invention reaches adoption. This paper relocates the problem to an upstream evaluative function: the state’s capacity to recognise new capability before that capability has been made legible to inherited standards of credible expertise, viable enterprise, acceptable risk and public value. It defines this capacity as evaluative-layer generativity and gives it an ex-ante specification — observable in the institutional permission structure before any outcome — in three markers: an authorised departure from prevailing evaluative standards; a consequent lowering of the cost of illegibility, such that actors may act and be recognised before validation; and the traceability of the departure. The specification severs generativity from the success it sometimes produces, and so avoids defining it by hindsight. Three cases fix the relationship between generativity and answerability. Shenzhen shows generativity secured by an authorised departure that was traceable to the party-state but never reconstructably answerable to a public — generativity without the answerability a rule-of-law order requires. Britain shows the inverse: an abundance of proceduralised answerability that forecloses the reconstructable kind, an equilibrium in which officials rationally optimise for demonstrable defensibility and so recognise capability only after it has become legible. Hong Kong shows that the two properties can coexist — generativity under law — though only in certain economic recognition channels, and fragile once its answerability constraints erode. The resulting thesis is conditional: generativity trades off against answerability in its proceduralised form, not against answerability in its reconstructable form, and even the favourable combination is perishable, sustained only while its constraints are actively held. The paper’s principal contribution is to distinguish generative state capacity, located at the evaluative layer, from the administrative state that processes and the developmental state that builds. This paper is diagnostic: it locates the problem and stops at it. The companion paper, Answerable Generativity in Innovation Governance: The Constitutional Grammar of Lawful Standard-Reopening, is constructive, developing the institutional devices through which a rule-of-law state might reopen evaluative standards while keeping the reopening answerable.
Peter Kahl (Wed,) studied this question.