PSL Quarterly Review (Oct 2013)

Industrial development in developing countries and the role of government interventions

  • S. LALL,
  • G. KELL

DOI
https://doi.org/10.13133/2037-3643/10642
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 44, no. 178

Abstract

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The work argues that while export orientation (in the sense of providing neutral incentives between foreign and domestic markets) is desirable, the experience of successful industrialisers does not support the minimalist government role prescribed. On the contrary, the most successful industrialisers have been dynamic precisely because they intervened heavily in the process of building up technological capabilities. Their interventions were both “functional” and “selective”, though the extent and choice of intervention varied greatly. JEL: O14

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