Ha-Joon Chang on the Future of India's Industrialization
11 hours ago
- #Economic Development
- #Industrialization
- #Trade Policy
- Trump's 'Liberation Day' tariffs introduced baseline and country-specific tariffs, affecting India with a 27% rate increased to 50%.
- Ha-Joon Chang argues free trade isn't necessary for development; infant industry protection, as used by South Korea, is crucial for nurturing domestic industries to compete globally.
- India's past protectionism failed due to lack of ambition and focus on preserving existing producers rather than fostering growth and export competitiveness.
- India has not industrialized significantly, with manufacturing's GDP share declining; premature deindustrialization and political economy issues, including elite interests in finance, hinder progress.
- Investment in India lags behind countries like China and South Korea, with low R&D spending and misallocation of capital away from productive capacities like infrastructure and education.
- Chang recommends redirecting capital to productive areas through government intervention, financial sector restraint, and convincing narratives to encourage private investment in key industries.
- India can still industrialize despite AI and automation threats; manufacturing is essential for high living standards, and services-based strategies are vulnerable to AI disruption.
- Domestic demand should drive industrialization, focusing on basic goods and leveraging existing strengths like pharmaceuticals and green energy, rather than relying solely on free trade agreements.
- Creating national champions requires conditional support to ensure productivity and exports, avoiding crony capitalism and ensuring inclusive growth to address wealth concentration and rural wage stagnation.
- Economics education is criticized for over-reliance on neoclassical theory and lack of pluralism, leading to unrealistic policy recommendations disconnected from historical and political contexts.