Industrial Policy and Development:The Political Economy of Capabilities Accumulation (Initiative for Policy Dialogue) '09
内容
目次
PREFACE; 1. The Political Economy of Capabilities Accumulation: The Pastand Future of Policies for Industrial Development; GENERAL INTRODUCTION; 2.Institutions and Policies Shaping Industrial Development: An IntroductoryNote; 3. Technological Learning, Policy Regimes and Growth: The Long TermPatterns and Some Specificities of a 'Globalized' Economy; INDUSTRIALPOLICIES IN AN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE; 4. Emulation v. Comparative Advantage:Competing and Complementary Principles in the History of Economic Policy; 5.Industrial Policies in Developing Countries: History and Perspectives; 6.Industrial Tariffs, International Trade And Development; 7. The (Slow) Returnof Industrial Policies in Latin America and the Caribbean; NATIONAL ANDREGIONAL EXPERIENCES; 8. Flying Geese and Waddling Ducks: the DifferentCapabilities of East Asia and Latin America to 'Demand-Adapt' and'Supply-Upgrade' their Export Productive Capacity; 9. Microeconomic Evolutionin High Uncertainty Contexts: The Manufacturing Sector in Argentina; 10. TheImpact of Public Policies in Brazil Along the Path from Semi-Stagnation toGrowth in a Sino-Centric Market; 11. The Past, Present and Future ofIndustrial Policy in India: Adapting to the Changing Domestic andInternational Environment; 12. Growth and Development in China and India: TheRole of Industrial and Innovation Policy in Rapid Catch-up; 13. The PoliticalEconomy of Industrial Policy in Asia and Latin America; 14. The Roles ofResearch at Universities and Public Labs in Economic Catch-up; 15.Nationality of Firm Ownership in Developing Countries: Who Should Crowd OutWhom in Imperfect Markets?; 16. A Question of Trust: Historical Lessons forCurrent Development; 17. Competition Policy and Industrial Development; 18.Latecomer Entrepreneurship: a Policy Perspective; 19. Intellectual Propertyand Industrial Development: A Critical Assessment; CONCLUSION; 20. The Futureof Industrial Policies in the New Millennium: Toward a Knowledge-centeredDevelopment Agenda