Worthwhile article. Excellent points  about how politics screws up
objectivity in goal setting.  We  could do ourselves a favor by
looking at the US system ( sometimes a  non-system ) for
exactly these kinds of effects. For  myself, the idea will
go into my queue of good ideas to  explore and work with.
 
Just one demurer. I wouldn't be too  quick to dismiss protectionism.
But what this means is "sound"  protectionism, not political protectionism.
Will try to find an example or two to  argue my case, no time
for that just now.
 
Billy
 
-------------------------------------------------------------
 
 
 
 
4/13/2012   [email protected]_ 
(mailto:[email protected])   writes:
 

This is the hard problem.  It is all  well and good to say we need an 
industrial policy. The question is, how do we  get one that does more good than 
harm?  It is far from a trivial  question.


My belief is the that the starting point  must be that we are creating a 
*dynamic* industrial policy.


And static policy -- trying to prop up  specific economic sectors, 
industries, or companies by name -- is going to  immediately be captured by 
political forces that end up hurting  competitiveness in the long run.  We need 
to 
create a political structure  that dynamically adapts to the realities of the 
market.


I agree that market incentives may not be  sufficient, but we need 
something more like DARPA and less like protectionism  if we truly want to 
ensure 
long-term security.


I don't know the answer, but I think it is  vital we start asking the right 
questions...


-- Ernie P.


_http://whynationsfail.com/blog/2012/4/12/industrial-policy-deja-vu.html_ 
(http://whynationsfail.com/blog/2012/4/12/industrial-policy-deja-vu.html) 



 
Industrial policy  déjà vu 
Much of development economics is  about coming up with ways of solving the 
problem of development. Some people  emphasize the need to create more 
randomized experiments to validate specific  programs. Others advocate foreign 
aid and other outside interventions. Yet  others draw inferences from 
macroeconomic success, for example from the East  Asian experience, and 
advocate “
industrial policy” — government support for  specific industries or firms 
that create jobs or generate positive spillovers  on others. 
All countries use some sort of  industrial policy. Moreover, one specific 
type of industrial policy is clearly  much needed all around the world today: 
support for clean energy to reduce  global carbon emissions. 
Is industrial policy the next big  thing in economic development? Perhaps 
even for the United States? Some people  think so (see, for example, this 
_Washington Post  column_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/ezra-klein/post/wonkbook-is-industrial-policy-back/2012/04/09/gIQAHL7i5S_print.html)
  by  
Ezra Klein). 
Actually, the real question is  not whether industrial policy is the next 
big thing, but whether it should  be. 
Industrial policy is not new as a  solution to development problems. 
Indeed, it was all the rage in the early  1960s as many former colonies became 
independent nations. Just at this time a  young English economist, Tony 
Killick, straight out of university, went off to  work for the government of 
Ghana 
just as it launched its own industrial  policy. It did this in the light of 
the then existing state of the art  economic theories, such as the Big Push 
(see our _blog post_ 
(http://whynationsfail.com/blog/2012/4/6/the-big-mis-forecast.html)  on this). 
But it all went terribly  wrong. 
In a sense the government did  achieve a big push. It presided over an 80% 
increase in the capital stock  between 1960-1965, 60% of which being by the 
public sector (80% of  non-residential investment). The problem was in the 
way this investment was  allocated. Years later Killick sat down and wrote 
one of the most important  books on solving the problems of poverty 
_Development  Economics in Action_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/Development-Economics-Action-Economic-Policies/dp/0312196822)
 . 
The book starts by describing the  theories and then shows how they all 
went wrong because they ignored politics.  Take his description of a big public 
project designed to be part of the big  push: a fruit canning factory “for 
the production of mango products.”  Unfortunately “there was recognized to 
be no local market” and the output of  the factory “was said to exceed by 
some multiple the total world trade in such  items” (p.229). The governments 
own report on this factory is worth quoting at  some length (from p. 233 
Killick’s book) 
Project: A factory is to be  erected at Wenchi, Brong Ahafo, to produce 
7,000 tons of mangoes and 5,300  tons of tomatoes per annum. If average yields 
of crops in that area will be  5 tons per acre per annum for mangoes and 5 
tons per acre for tomatoes,  there should be 1,400 acres of mangoes and 1,060 
acres of tomatoes in the  field to supply the factory. 
The Problem: The present supply  of mangoes in the area is from a few trees 
scattered in the bush and  tomatoes are not grown on commercial scale, and 
so the production of these  crops will have to start from scratch. Mangoes 
take 5-7 years from planting  to start fruiting. How to obtain sufficient 
planting materials and to  organize production of raw materials quickly become 
the major problems of  this project.
Killick’s acerbic comment on  this, stated a whole year before the factory 
was constructed, sums it  up: 
it is difficult to imagine a  more damning commentary on the efficiency of 
project  planning.
This was not an isolated case.  Such “white elephants” of development were 
widespread and Killick discusses  many more. What on earth was going on? 
The Ghanaian government had good  economists advising them, like Killick 
and even Nobel Laureate Arthur Lewis.  The problem was that the whole 
industrial policy was subservient to politics.  If the government of President 
Nkrumah needed support in Brong Ahafo, for  example, then he needed to give 
people jobs, and he built a factory there to  achieve that. Politics came 
before 
economic efficiency. This, unfortunately,  has been the general pattern with 
industrial policy. The problem is not  thinking of situations in which 
industrial policy might be a good thing, of  which there certainly are some. 
The 
problem is trying to identify the  political situations in which industrial 
policy can actually be used to  address these situations, and that is a 
much taller order. 
There is little reason to think  that the new version of industrial policy 
in the developing world or in the  United States will be any different. 



-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical  Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group:  _http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism_ 
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Radical Centrism website and blog: _http://RadicalCentrism.org_ 
(http://radicalcentrism.org/) 



-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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