The Pak Banker

A "True" industrial policy for all

- Fuad Hasanov

In the January 1954 issue of The Atlantic, John F. Kennedy, then the junior US senator from Massachuse­tts, argued that the ongoing migration of industries from New England to the American South should not be hindered. He called on the government instead to provide loans and other forms of support to assist New England-based businesses, retrain industrial workers, and fund local industrial developmen­t agencies.

Kennedy recognized that the government had an important role to play in both lifting the South and spurring new industries in New England. Today, industrial policy is back on the agenda, after having spent decades on the fringes of the policy debate.

In addition to China's Made in China 2025 initiative, the United Kingdom's recently released Industrial Strategy, and a new FrancoGerm­an policy manifesto, Gulf Cooperatio­n Council countries have also adopted strategies to develop non-oil sectors, and many developing countries are pursuing similar diversific­ation efforts.

These policies have emerged as a response to pressures from internatio­nal competitio­n, a broad slowdown in productivi­ty growth, manufactur­ing job losses, and rising inequality. But industrial policy has always stirred an intense debate among policymake­rs and academics. Critics argue that such strategies have not worked in many countries, and have instead resulted in cronyism and corruption.

A better approach, they argue, is to reduce the role of the state in the economy, improve the business environmen­t, and invest in infrastruc­ture and education. Under favorable conditions, firms and entreprene­urs will emerge and grow in multitudes. The real-world failures of industrial policies in Latin America and elsewhere attest to the validity of this view.

In contrast, proponents of industrial policy argue that we live in a world of market failures that require some sort of state interventi­on. Otherwise, new sectors, especially advanced technology sectors, simply would not emerge, even in a good business environmen­t. Naturally, this camp focuses on past successes, particular­ly in East Asian economies.

In a recent Internatio­nal Monetary Fund working paper, we use these past successes to identify three principles that underlie what we call a "true" industrial policy. In the Asian "miracle" economies - such as Singapore and South Korea - as well as in Japan, Germany, and the United States, the government intervened early on to support domestic firms in emerging, technologi­cally sophistica­ted sectors.

The successful policies placed special emphasis on export orientatio­n, and held firms accountabl­e for the support received. Given the strong focus on cutting-edge sectors, this "true" industrial policy is essentiall­y a technology and innovation policy (TIP).

Technology and innovation are key to economic growth. China's Made in China 2025 program essentiall­y emulates the strategy used by South Korea (and Japan before it) to escape the so-called middle-income trap. Likewise, the new UK and Franco-German industrial strategies focus on the industries of the future: renewable energy, artificial intelligen­ce, and robotics.

Capitalizi­ng on the potential of disruptive innovation is an option for advanced and developing countries alike. Regardless of one's place on the global value chain, producing cuttingedg­e technologi­es creates opportunit­ies not only for domestic investors and businesses but also for consumers and industries elsewhere. Moreover, technologi­cal advances in the US, China, the UK, France, Germany, and other countries could be beneficial to all, contributi­ng to competitio­n, innovation, and living standards globally.

Just as it takes two wings to fly, both the state and the market are needed to implement an effective TIP. Indeed, "state vs. market" is precisely the wrong way to think about it.

As we argued in our 2016 book Breaking the Oil Spell, the state must take the lead in steering resources toward activities that the market might not initially support on its own. At the same time, government­s also must adhere to decision-making processes based on market signals, in order to guarantee space for an autonomous, competitiv­e private sector. As economist Mariana Mazzucato argues, "When the public takes the lead and is ambitious, not just facilitati­ng or being meek, it can push the frontier."As Mazzucato explains in The Entreprene­urial State.

 ??  ?? In addition to China's Made in China 2025 initiative, the United Kingdom's recently released Industrial Strategy,
and a new Franco-German policy manifesto, Gulf Cooperatio­n Council countries have also adopted strategies to develop non-oil sectors, and many developing countries are pursuing sim
ilar diversific­ation efforts.
In addition to China's Made in China 2025 initiative, the United Kingdom's recently released Industrial Strategy, and a new Franco-German policy manifesto, Gulf Cooperatio­n Council countries have also adopted strategies to develop non-oil sectors, and many developing countries are pursuing sim ilar diversific­ation efforts.

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