Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Abbreviations
- Foreword
- Preface and Acknowledgments
- Executive Summary
- Chapter 1 What Is Inclusive Growth?
- Chapter 2 What Is the Main Constraint that Developing Countries Face?
- Chapter 3 Why Full Employment and Who Should Be Responsible for Trying to Achieve It?
- Chapter 4 Why Is Growth Unstable?
- Chapter 5 What Is the Role of Agriculture in the Process of Structural Change and in Delivering Full Employment? Full Employment I
- Chapter 6 What Is the Role of Investment in Delivering Full Employment? Full Employment II
- Chapter 7 Why Is “Planning Development” Necessary?
- Chapter 8 What Is Industrial Policy? Full Employment III
- Chapter 9 Structural Transformation, Industrialization, and Technological Change in Developing Asia: What Does the Empirical Evidence Show?
- Chapter 10 Why Do Export Diversification and Sophistication Matter?
- Chapter 11 Unemployment Versus Inflation: Which One Should Be the Public Enemy Number One?
- Chapter 12 What Should Be the Role of Fiscal and Monetary Policies for Development? Full Employment IV
- Chapter 13 Is It Possible to Achieve Full Employment in the Presence of Structural Transformation?
- Chapter 14 Should the Government (Public Sector) Intervene Directly and Become the Employer of Last Resort? Full Employment V
- Chapter 15 Can Competitiveness and Globalization Deliver Inclusiveness and Full Employment?
- Chapter 16 Export-Led Growth or Domestic Demand–Led Growth?
- Chapter 17 Is Education a Key Ingredient of Inclusive Growth?
- Chapter 18 Conclusions: How Can Developing Countries Implement an Inclusive-Growth and Full-Employment Strategy?
- References
- Author Index
- Subject Index
Chapter 8 - What Is Industrial Policy? Full Employment III
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Abbreviations
- Foreword
- Preface and Acknowledgments
- Executive Summary
- Chapter 1 What Is Inclusive Growth?
- Chapter 2 What Is the Main Constraint that Developing Countries Face?
- Chapter 3 Why Full Employment and Who Should Be Responsible for Trying to Achieve It?
- Chapter 4 Why Is Growth Unstable?
- Chapter 5 What Is the Role of Agriculture in the Process of Structural Change and in Delivering Full Employment? Full Employment I
- Chapter 6 What Is the Role of Investment in Delivering Full Employment? Full Employment II
- Chapter 7 Why Is “Planning Development” Necessary?
- Chapter 8 What Is Industrial Policy? Full Employment III
- Chapter 9 Structural Transformation, Industrialization, and Technological Change in Developing Asia: What Does the Empirical Evidence Show?
- Chapter 10 Why Do Export Diversification and Sophistication Matter?
- Chapter 11 Unemployment Versus Inflation: Which One Should Be the Public Enemy Number One?
- Chapter 12 What Should Be the Role of Fiscal and Monetary Policies for Development? Full Employment IV
- Chapter 13 Is It Possible to Achieve Full Employment in the Presence of Structural Transformation?
- Chapter 14 Should the Government (Public Sector) Intervene Directly and Become the Employer of Last Resort? Full Employment V
- Chapter 15 Can Competitiveness and Globalization Deliver Inclusiveness and Full Employment?
- Chapter 16 Export-Led Growth or Domestic Demand–Led Growth?
- Chapter 17 Is Education a Key Ingredient of Inclusive Growth?
- Chapter 18 Conclusions: How Can Developing Countries Implement an Inclusive-Growth and Full-Employment Strategy?
- References
- Author Index
- Subject Index
Summary
In this chapter, I address the question of how a country can induce structural change and diversification, and plan transitions to higher growth rates. This is a fundamental aspect of the problem of developing countries, namely, the need to increase productive capacity. Indeed, the transition from agriculture into a modern industrial and service economy, and decisions about how much to invest and where, can be viewed as problems of self-discovery and of understanding the externalities that lessen incentives for productive diversification. Today's developed countries directed policies to industrialize. Chang (2002) argues that today's developed countries—such as the United Kingdom, Germany, France, the United States, Sweden, and Japan—used industrial, trade, and technological policies when they were developing and catching up. They used some form of infant-industry policy or tariff protection. More recently, the Republic of Korea is the clearest case of successful economic development achieved through infant-industry protection measures.
Industrial policy has traditionally been understood as any type of selective intervention or government policy that attempts to alter the structure of production toward sectors that are expected to offer better prospects for economic growth than without such intervention. This type of intervention has its adherents-those who believe in market failures—and its detractors—those who believe in the efficient working of markets. The latter argue that industrial policy interventions have often degenerated into an exercise in “picking winners,” a game played by government officials deciding what activities and sectors to promote and to spend public money on.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Inclusive Growth, Full Employment, and Structural ChangeImplications and Policies for Developing Asia, pp. 75 - 82Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2010