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We discuss the considerable literature that has developed in recent years providing rigorous evidence on how industrial policies work. This literature is a significant improvement over the earlier generation of empirical work, which was largely correlational and marred by interpretational problems. On the whole, the recent crop of papers offers a more positive take on industrial policy. We review the standard rationales and critiques of industrial policy and provide a broad overview of new empirical approaches to measurement. We discuss how the recent literature, paying close attention to measurement, causal inference, and economic structure, is offering a nuanced and contextual understanding of the effects of industrial policy. We re-evaluate the East Asian experience with industrial policy in light of recent results. Finally, we conclude by reviewing how industrial policy is being reshaped by a new understanding of governance, a richer set of policy instruments beyond subsidies, and the reality of deindustrialization.
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Réka Juhász
Nathaniel Lane
Dani Rodrik
Annual Review of Economics
Harvard University
University of Oxford
University of British Columbia
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Juhász et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68e6c02bb6db64358763f44c — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-economics-081023-024638