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bernard manson's avatar

Back in the 1980s I was instructed in the pendulum theory (reality) of corporate governance. Control was weakened until things went wrong, then it was tightened until nothing happened, then it was weakened again.

As long as people were aware of the cycle, it was sort of reasonable - a drunk man successfully finding his way home..

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Jack Smith's avatar

On industrial policy more specifically, I'd also argue that the notion governments shouldn't pick winners is an example of the nirvana fallacy. Even when they don't have big, dirigiste industrial policies, modern states pick winners all the time. Sometimes they do that intentionally, for well-founded reasons e.g., the UK's CfDs for offshore wind and nuclear. Other times, it's a by-product of other decisions. One recent example that comes to mind relates to the FT Alphaville piece on how the UK is, as Dan Davies put it, the Saudi Arabia of 'doing miscellaneous stuff' (https://www.ft.com/content/8d3ed4d7-6ab3-487d-81ee-3fd337b68538). Someone in the comments pointed out that the UK's planning restrictions and low public investment are what you would put in place if you wanted to craft an industrial policy to produce more small consultancies at the expense of everything else.

Having an industrial policy, or if you don't like the word "policy", industrial strategy, is important because this will happen no matter what a government's intentions are. Modern states directly account for a large chunk of economic activity, and via regulation they indirectly influence almost everything that happens in the economy. Because of this, it's important to take the implications for different sectors of government decision-making into account in a joined-up way. Otherwise, you just end up with an accidental industrial policy that may not be to your liking.

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