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Industrial development : how states build capabilities and deliver economic prosperity / Greg Clydesdale.

By: Clydesdale, GregMaterial type: TextTextSeries: Routledge studies in the modern world economyPublisher: Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2022Description: vii, 227p: IllustrationsISBN: 9781032075655; 9781032075662Subject(s): Economic development | Industrialization | Economic policyDDC classification: HD82 .C59 2022
Contents:
Silicon Valley, trajectories and government policy -- Trajectories, competitive advantage and learning -- Industrial policy debates -- Policy options -- The early Asian model: building domestic businesses -- Capability building for a global economy: Singapore and Ireland -- Building global networks: New Zealand and Brazil -- Building at the technological frontier -- Creating new knowledge: R&D and universities -- Entrepreneurship policy: learning to build new businesses -- Place-based policies for growth -- Social capital: building capabilities to work together -- Human capital and diversity: acquiring worker's capabilities -- Conclusion: learning about industrial policy.
Summary: "Governments are regularly judged by their ability to deliver economic prosperity, however many policies fail to deliver their desired outcomes. Industrial Development examines historical examples of how governments have attempted to build productive capabilities and promote industrial learning. Each chapter shows a different way in which this is done whether it is imitating existing production technologies, building new advanced technologies, tapping into existing global chains or building their own value chains. The book looks at a wide spectrum of countries and industries from Silicon Valley to the early Asian model of building domestic industries. The book also reveals that academics and policy makers can be a major source of policy failure. This book makes an important contribution to our understanding of capability building, industrial development and economic growth and will be an essential reading for economists, policy makers and government officials making policy in a global economy"--
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Index, References

Silicon Valley, trajectories and government policy -- Trajectories, competitive advantage and learning -- Industrial policy debates -- Policy options -- The early Asian model: building domestic businesses -- Capability building for a global economy: Singapore and Ireland -- Building global networks: New Zealand and Brazil -- Building at the technological frontier -- Creating new knowledge: R&D and universities -- Entrepreneurship policy: learning to build new businesses -- Place-based policies for growth -- Social capital: building capabilities to work together -- Human capital and diversity: acquiring worker's capabilities -- Conclusion: learning about industrial policy.

"Governments are regularly judged by their ability to deliver economic prosperity, however many policies fail to deliver their desired outcomes. Industrial Development examines historical examples of how governments have attempted to build productive capabilities and promote industrial learning. Each chapter shows a different way in which this is done whether it is imitating existing production technologies, building new advanced technologies, tapping into existing global chains or building their own value chains. The book looks at a wide spectrum of countries and industries from Silicon Valley to the early Asian model of building domestic industries. The book also reveals that academics and policy makers can be a major source of policy failure. This book makes an important contribution to our understanding of capability building, industrial development and economic growth and will be an essential reading for economists, policy makers and government officials making policy in a global economy"--

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