A
panel discussion in Doha, Qatar, as part of the Thirteenth UN Conference
on Trade and Development (UNCTAD XIII) brought together some economists
and policy makers to provide new perspectives on industrial policies
in the South. It became evident that industrial policies have been
significant, if unsung, forces behind the much trumpeted ''emergence''
of some developing economies as major players in the world stage.
For some time now, in different parts of the world, industrial policy
has been making a comeback. Indeed, as participants in the panel
noted, it never really went away, especially in the more successful
countries, even though for at least two decades it was decried and
generally given a bad name by the dominant Washington Consensus.
What exactly is industrial policy? Robert Wade - whose book ''Governing
the Market: Economic theory and the role of government in East Asia''
(Princeton University Press 1990) remains an essential classic for
anyone even vaguely interested in this issue - was able to provide
the simplest definition: selective government support for some activities
over others. This does not relate only to ''industry, but to any
economic activity. The basic purpose is to shift the economy towards
higher value added activities in a process that cannot occur based
simply on free market forces.
This has been described simplistically as the strategy of ''picking
winners''. And this in turn is obviously prone to all sorts of difficulties,
which is why such a strategy has been criticised roundly for the
possibilities it generates for wrong government choices, creating
rent-seeking behaviour and crony capitalism, thereby wasting public
resources, other forms of elite capture and so on. While these are
certainly problems that must be recognised and dealt with, overall
this is far too unsophisticated a response.
In the first place, the best industrial strategy is not about picking
individual firms or even sectors. Rather, as Richard Kozul-Wright
pointed out, UNCTAD and other have stressed over the years that
it is about creating appropriate economic environments and generating
incentives for economic diversification in a wide range of ways:
through fiscal and monetary policies, financial, trade and investment
policies, infrastructure creation, education (particularly higher
education to develop the required skills dometically) and so on.
Indeed, at some level, all countries are pursuing industrial policies,
whether or not they recognise it, although of course the quality
of the interventions varies.
In a fascinating and thoughtful intervention, Joao Carlos Ferraz,
Vice President of the Brazilian development bank BNDES, brought
out how this can work in practice. BNDES (whose assets currently
are greater than those of the World Bank and Asian Development Bank
put together) has emerged as a critical player in Brazil, allowing
for the development of some now internationally competitive industries,
providing more funds for investment to some poorer regions, and
even enabling faster recovery in troubled macroeconomic circumstances
such as those generated by the global crisis of 2008.
Ferraz noted that tenacity, flexibility and realism are key elements
in any successful industrial policy, and also that much of it consists
not of forceful direction but gentle and persistent nudging to develop
certain sectors. He also pointed to the need to align different
elements of policy: trade and industrial policies, financial strategies,
exchange rates, fiscal and monetary policies. The firm commitment
of the Brazilian government to industrial policy geared towards
productive diversification was strongly evident.
This is sharp contrast to India, where industrial policy is still
explicitly criticised and apparently sought to be dismantled and
avoided by governments - not just the current government, but most
previous governments for the past two decades. Indeed, the conventional
narrative about the Indian economic growth story is that it is all
about ''economic reforms'' that liberated productive forces in the
economy from the shackles of government intervention. It is generally
believed that the previous import substituting industrialisation
strategy created a high cost economy that stifled enterprise and
innovation, and so opening up to domestic and international competition
was the critical force making for growth. In other words, moving
away from industrial policy is seen as the cause for success.
Despite some elements of truth in this argument, it is also far
too simplistic. Indeed, it can plausibly be argued that many of
the more sustainable elements of the Indian growth success actually
reflect the effects of past and present industrial policies, even
when these are not officially recognised.
This can be illustrated with examples of four sectors that are currently
seen as examples of India's economic achievement: software, pharmaceuticals,
chemicals and automotive ancillaries.
Representatives of the software industry tend to be the biggest
exponents of the argument that they ''did it all by themselves'',
without any support from government, and only because they were
freed from the deadening hand of the state. Yet the emergence of
this industry in India cannot be imagine without the Nehruvian higher
education policies that created institutions like the IIT and universities
that could provide the skills required. (Incidentally this was in
the teeth of opposition from the World Bank and others who argued
that India should only focus on primary education.) And the industry
has benefited for decades from prolonged tax holidays and a range
of other incentives, all of which can be seen as examples of industrial
policy.
In the case of pharmaceuticals, the fundamental factor behind the
expansion is clear: the patent regime until 2001-05, which allowed
only process patents in pharmaceutical products. This enabled domestic
firms to engage in reverse engineering to produce generic alternatives
to existing drugs, and thereby created the cheapest drug industry
in the world with significant economies of scale. There is no question
that such a law (which was both an industrial policy and a means
of ensuring affordable drugs for the population) was critical in
the growth of the industry to enable it to compete globally.
The auto ancillary industry was the unusual child of two very different
parents: a liberalisation of the production of final products, including
more FDI; and a strategy of first insisting on and then encouraging
increasing levels of indigenisation among the domestic players in
the newly liberalised industry. The chemical industry too, especially
in its large-scale petrochemical form, cannot be imagined without
the many trade policy, fiscal and infrastructural benefits that
certain players (such as Reliance) received from the state.
All of these are certainly forms of industrial policy, and while
the specific policies in turn may have various drawbacks, it would
be foolish to deny their role in the growth of these sectors. The
point is, however, that these occurred under the aegis of a state
that was officially in denial about industrial policy, and therefore
these were mostly ad hoc or individual decisions rather than part
of a more systematic and developed aggregate strategy. This in turn
has been associated with several weaknesses or even failures of
the overall economic strategy, which are now becoming even more
prominent as the Indian growth story loses some of its shine even
for those who have not been excluded from its benefits.
The first major failure is in employment, which has simply not kept
pace either with the GDP expansion or with the requirements of the
growing labour force. This in turn has meant that incomes of the
majority of the population have not risen sufficiently to enable
broad-based growth of consumption demand. Instead, the market has
been delivered by increasing income and asset inequality and credit-driven
bubbles.
The second major weakness of this ''industrial policy that wasn't'',
is the lack of synergy between industrial sectors. Small and medium
enterprises have mostly been the Cinderellas of the expansion, doing
most of the work but denied even the ability to survive with dignity,
and any systematic strategy for SMEs has been conspicuous by its
absence. Other gaps resulting from lack of synergy are also evident:
for example, the domestic steel industry does not produce auto-grade
steel, so the automobile industry must import its requirements.
This leads to the third significant failure: the growing lack of
positive synergies between agriculture and non-agriculture, and
the continued languishing of the agricultural sector (which continues
to employ at least half of the labour force despite its shrinking
share of GDP) even in period of high product prices.
Another major lacuna has been the lack of sufficient development
of infrastructure, which has so many direct and indirect effects
on economic diversification that the point does need to be laboured
upon. Finally, this has been inadequate as a really positive industrial
policy also because there has been no technology policy and until
very recently, no attempt at taking the issues of research, development
and innovation seriously. Indeed, the most basic way of improving
aggregate productivity – providing credit and access to technology,
inputs and new knowledge to the small producers who generate the
bulk of the productive activity in India – is still ignored.
So India has much to learn from other developing countries that
have explicitly and successfully employed industrial policies even
in largely market-driven economies. Indeed, if India does not learn
from these very different experiences to develop its own more coherent
and sustainable industrial strategy, its future economic trajectory
is likely to be even more uncertain.
* This article was
originally published in Frontline, Volume 29 - Issue 09: May. 05-18,
2012 and is available at
http://www.frontlineonnet.com/stories/20120518290910300.htm