Industrial Policy

Fairly new article on international manufacturing. I broke it down, added information plus another chart, and did some editing. It really was a good article on manufacturing. I just made it better based on my fifty years in supply chain and throughput.

Industrial Policy is Back. Is That a Good Thing?

What Are the Issues?

Industrial policy is experiencing a revival. This time it is the largest countries that are leading the resurgence as they seek to actively steer the structural transformation of their economies to advance green transition, to boost resilience of critical supply chains and to encourage innovation and domestic production for economic or national security reasons.

What are the Policies

Industrial policies aim to alter the incentives of private firms. They also entail a risk of resource misallocation and sizable fiscal costs that can become more apparent over time. Reflecting government capture, such policies tend to be maintained for far longer than justified. The benefits are concentrated in a few who can exert strong political pressure to keep them in place while the costs are diffused over a wide population and hard to measure. These policies can also affect trade, investment, and financial flows as well as global market prices. Such could have significant implications for trade partners and the global economy.

As the global environment became challenging in recent years, there has been a remarkable resurgence of interest in industrial policies. It’s noteworthy this surge in interest seems to reflect both:

  1. The traditional concern with encouraging domestic industrial growth at a time when global markets seemed to offer more limited opportunities, as well as . . .
  2. A range of new and more strategic objectives.

Competitiveness is the traditional motive for industrial policy. It has fostered 26 percent of the industrial policy interventions since January 2023. New motives are now far more dominant.  Twenty-four percent of all recent measures are aimed at climate change mitigation, 14 percent at addressing national security and geopolitical concerns, and 10 percent at improving supply chain resilience (see initial chart). These new motives encompassing climate change mitigation and geopolitical concerns, seem to be increasingly prominent. They accounted for 52 percent of all such measures in the first half of 2024which is up from 45 percent in 2023. This pattern has been mainly driven by advanced economies, while in emerging markets and developing economies industrial policies are still more often motivated by competitiveness. 

= Subsidies appear to be the most commonly used policy instrument. Here again there are differences between advanced economies, emerging markets, and developing economies (see chart below). Advanced economies are more likely to use direct financial grants, state loans, and state aid. Trade restrictions are more frequently used by emerging markets and developing economies. The popularity of instruments such as local content requirements, controls on foreign investment, and public procurement localization has been on the rise in the first half of 2024 as compared to 2023. This may be an indication that governments are becoming less hesitant to use discriminatory measures, including those that are in clear breach of the WTO commitments.

The Meaning of an Industrial Policy

While industrial policy can help address market failures, the bar to get it right should be high. Careful industrial policy design, implementation, and governance are critical to minimize distortions, avoid or mitigate government failures, contain fiscal costs, and avoid negative cross-border spillovers.