男女羞羞视频在线观看,国产精品黄色免费,麻豆91在线视频,美女被羞羞免费软件下载,国产的一级片,亚洲熟色妇,天天操夜夜摸,一区二区三区在线电影

Opinion

Truth about industrial policy

By Justin Yifu Lin (China Daily)
Updated: 2010-12-29 14:19
Large Medium Small

One of the best-kept economic secrets was reconfirmed in 2010: most countries, intentionally or otherwise, pursue an industrial policy in one form or the other. This is true not only of China, Singapore, France, and Brazil - countries usually associated with such policies - but also for the United Kingdom, Germany, Chile and the United States whose industrial policies are often less explicit.

Given that an industrial policy broadly refers to any government decision, regulation or law that encourages ongoing activity or investment in an industry, this should come as no surprise. After all, economic development and sustained growth are the result of continual industrial and technological change, a process that requires collaboration between the public and private sectors.

Historical evidence shows that in countries that successfully transformed from an agrarian to a modern economy - including those in Western Europe, North America and, more recently, in East Asia - governments coordinated key investments by private companies that helped launch new industries, and often provided incentives to pioneering companies.

Even before the global financial crisis and subsequent recession, governments around the world provided support to the private sector through direct subsidies, tax credits or loans from development banks to bolster growth and support job creation. Policy discussions at many high-level meetings sought to strengthen other features of industrial policy, including public financing of airports, highways, ports, electricity grids, telecommunications and other infrastructure, improvements in institutional effectiveness, an emphasis on education and skills and a clearer legal framework.

The global crisis has led to a rethinking of governments' economic role. The challenge for industrial policy is greater, because it should assist the design of efficient, government-sponsored programs in which the public and private sectors coordinate their efforts to develop new technologies and industries.

But history also tells us that while governments in almost all developing countries have attempted to play that facilitating role at some point, most have failed. The economic history of the erstwhile Soviet Union, and Latin America, Africa and Asia has been marked by inefficient public investment and misguided government interventions that have resulted in many "white elephants".

These pervasive failures appear to be due mostly to a government's inability to align its efforts with its country's resource base and level of development. Indeed, governments' propensity to target overly ambitious industries that were misaligned with available resources and skills helps to explain why their attempts to "pick winners" often resulted in "picking losers". In contrast, governments in many successful developing countries have focused on strengthening industries that have done well with comparable factor endowments.

Related readings:
Truth about industrial policy Advanced industries a priority
Truth about industrial policy China appoints new minister of MIIT
Truth about industrial policy?titleIndustrial output growth to slow in 2011
Truth about industrial policy 
China key industries to grow 24% in 2011-15

Thus, the lesson from economic history and development is straightforward: government support aimed at upgrading and diversifying industry must be anchored in the requisite endowments. That way, once constraints on new industries are removed, private firms in those industries quickly become competitive domestically and internationally. The question then becomes how to identify competitive industries and how to formulate and implement policies to facilitate their development.

In developed countries, most industries are advanced, which suggests that upgrading requires innovation. Support for basic research, and patents to protect successful innovation, may help. For developing countries, Cameroonian economist and adviser to the World Bank's senior vice-president Clestin Monga and I have recently developed an approach - called the growth identification and facilitation framework - that can help governments in developing countries increase the probability of success in supporting new industries.

This framework suggests that policymakers identify tradable industries that have performed well in growing countries with similar resources and skills, and with a per capita income about double their own. If domestic private companies in these sectors are already present, policymakers should identify and remove constraints on those companies' technological upgrading or on entry by other enterprises. In industries where no domestic companies are present, policymakers should aim to attract foreign direct investment from the countries being emulated or organize programs for incubating new enterprises.

The government should also pay attention to the development by private enterprises of new and competitive products, and support the scaling up of successful private-sector innovations in new industries. In countries with a poor business environment, special economic zones or industrial parks can facilitate the entry of such companies, foreign direct investment and the formation of industrial clusters. Finally, the government may help pioneering companies in the new industries by offering tax incentives for a limited period, co-financing investments or providing access to land or foreign exchange.

Our approach provides policymakers in developing countries with a framework to tackle the daunting coordination challenges inherent in the creation of new, competitive industries. It also has the potential to nurture a business environment conducive to private-sector growth, job creation and poverty alleviation.

As economies around the world struggle to maintain or restore growth in 2011, industrial policy is likely to be under a brighter spotlight than ever before. Given the right framework, there is no reason for it to remain in the shadows.

The author is chief economist and senior vice-president for development economics at the World Bank.

主站蜘蛛池模板: 潮安县| 汝城县| 县级市| 景德镇市| 聂拉木县| 敦煌市| 平塘县| 龙川县| 应城市| 华坪县| 内乡县| 康马县| 河北省| 泸定县| 台北市| 北票市| 七台河市| 巴彦县| 黄大仙区| 静海县| 榕江县| 临海市| 东光县| 香格里拉县| 沁源县| 河池市| 锦州市| 纳雍县| 潢川县| 枝江市| 家居| 吕梁市| 天津市| 房产| 石泉县| 安乡县| 深州市| 札达县| 鹰潭市| 南川市| 玛多县| 会昌县| 宁强县| 肇源县| 大安市| 丰镇市| 准格尔旗| 辉县市| 香河县| 佛坪县| 普安县| 承德县| 乌拉特中旗| 喀什市| 万盛区| 南汇区| 邹平县| 昔阳县| 辽中县| 平潭县| 怀来县| 金华市| 儋州市| 乡城县| 美姑县| 隆德县| 株洲县| 大悟县| 宽甸| 沅陵县| 东源县| 文安县| 长沙市| 西藏| 建湖县| 汝城县| 井研县| 淮南市| 七台河市| 土默特右旗| 曲阳县| 庄浪县|