Author (Person) | Aghion, Philippe, Boulanger, Julian |
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Publisher | Bruegel |
Series Title | Bruegel Policy Briefs |
Series Details | No. 4, June 2011 |
Publication Date | June 2011 |
Content Type | Journal | Series | Blog |
Industrial policy has a bad name: ‘picking winners’ and thus distorting competition, while exposing government to capture by vested interests. But there are reasons for a rethink. First, climate change: without government intervention to jump-start massive private investment in clean technologies, governments, by default, encourage investment in dirtier technologies. Second, a new post-crisis realism: laissez-faire complacency by many governments has led to mis-investment in the non-tradable sector at the expense of growth-rich tradables. Third, China – and some other emerging economies – are big deployers of growth-enhancing sectoral policies. The challenge for Europe is how it can design and govern sectoral policies that are competition-friendly and thus growth-enhancing. |
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Source Link | Link to Main Source http://aei.pitt.edu/32066/1/Rethinking_industrial_policy_(English)[1].pdf |
Subject Categories | Business and Industry, Environment |
Countries / Regions | Europe |