People in countries around the world would prefer to live in a a growing economy with opportunities for good jobs. Thus, it’s unsurprising that governments around the world would like to enact policies to deliver such outcomes. But industrial policy is hard: after all, if it was easy for governments to legislate prosperity, then there would be a lot less poverty and inequality in the world. Policies that favor one sector often involve costs both to the government and to other disfavored sectors. Ana Margarida Fernandes and Tristan Reed provide a menu of 15 industrial policy tools, and how and when they are more or less likely to work, in Industrial Policy for Development: Approaches in the 21st Century (World Bank, April 2026). Here is their menu:


You will notice that the possibilities are divided into first-rank and second-rank, where the second-rank choices specify that they make sense only when another option is not available. The authors make very clear that they are not suggesting every country should try everything on the menu, nor that these policies are certain to work. Instead, they are arguing that given details about the economy, government bandwidth, and fiscal situtation of the country, these policies are worth considering. But they offer many cautions:
Powerful interest groups often lobby for policies that benefit their constituents at disproportionate cost to the government. This can divert resources from more broadly valuable investments, such as education and health. Economists often describe this dynamic as government failure, offering it as an alternative explanation for why developing economies have struggled to build competitive industries.21 In such contexts, industrial policy can be inefficient or even harmful. For instance, subsidizing one industry may raise the costs of labor, capital, or raw materials for others. …
They offer a “decision sequence”:
(1) Keep emphasis on improving enabling institutions.
Despite the potential of well-designed industrial policies for development, nothing in this report suggests that they can be effective or efficient without enabling institutions. These institutions include accountable and capable implementing agencies that are insulated from politics and interest-group pressures, and strong economywide fundamentals: an educated and healthy workforce, energy and transportation infrastructure, and a sound macroeconomic framework. …
(2) Select low-cost public inputs not provided by the market.
Even with limited fiscal space and small local markets, countries with sufficient government bandwidth can still pursue an industrial strategy. The first choice should be public inputs that can be delivered at cost and are underprovided due to specific market failures, such as coordination failures (industrial parks), skills underinvestment (skills development), and information asymmetries (market access assistance and quality infrastructure). …
(3) Provide market incentives if fundamentals and public inputs are insufficient.
Countries should turn to market incentives as a last resort, as these are typically the most costly—either fiscally (production and innovation subsidies, consumer demand subsidies, and public procurement), for the broader economy (import tariffs, local content requirements, commodity export bans, export subsidies), or due to retaliation from trading partners. Moreover, these tools require careful monitoring. A notable exception is a technology transfer quid pro quo arrangement, when technology cannot be licensed, which incurs no fiscal cost.
(4) Be wary of macroeconomic interventions.
Competitive exchange rate devaluation is difficult to sustain over the long period of time needed to realize benefits and can trigger retaliation by other countries. More research is needed to understand whether and when general tax credits for research and development in private businesses translate into valuable inventions.
The authors also note:
Deciding which business activities are strategic is perhaps the most difficult and contested topic in industrial policy. As Nobel laureate Paul Krugman remarked about industrial policy in 1983: “While there is a valid case for targeting grounded in economic theory, the theoretical basis is too complex and ambiguous to be useful given the current state of knowledge”. Of course, the last four decades have seen significant progress in economic measurement, and recent years have seen a resurgence of interest in industrial policy among economists. Nonetheless, Krugman’s argument still largely holds.
The report offers lots to chew on about specific policies and the empirical record. Overall, where does it leave our thinking about industrial policy? My sense is that there’s relatively little controversy about the value of having better government institutions that focus on an educated and healthy workforce, strong macroeconomic funamentals, infrastructur, skills development, advice an networking on export promotion, and standard-setting, all in a way that is somewhat insulated from interest-group pressures. Indeed, my guess is that for a lot of people, these sorts of activities are just sound governmance, and they would reserve the term “industrial policy” for policies that provide fairly direct assistance to specific industries.
This narrower idea of industrial policy remains quite controversial. Advocates triumphantly cite cases where fairly direct assistance to specific industries (grants, cheap loans, tariff protection, government contracts, and the like) have worked out fairly well; cynics triumphantly cite cases where these forms of direct assistance do not seem to have helped even the targeted industry to develop, grow, innovate, and prosper, while still imposing substantial costs on the rest of the economy. Personally, I try to be open-minded but I lean to the cynical side.
For readers intersted in more on this subject, the world’s most dramatic economic success stories since the middle of the 20th century have all happened in nations of east Asia: Japan, Korea, China, as well as Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, and Hong Kong. The Fall 2025 issue of the Journal of Economic Perspectives (where I work as Managing Editor)offers a two-paper mini-symposium on “The East Asian Tigers”:
- “Industrial Policy, Asian Miracle Style,” by Reda Cherif and Fuad Hasanov
- “The World Bank’s East Asian Miracle: Too Much a Product of Its Time?” by Nancy Birdsall














