Before East Asia's financial meltdown in 1997, many believed that the entrepreneurial state contributed to the East Asian "miracle" by accelerating industrial development in a "market-friendly" way. The now-evolving international consensus on industrial policy emphasizes a hands-off approach, with activist government playing a reduced role and competition policy playing an important role. But implementing such a policy will require sophisticated new skills in public administration.
Before East Asia's financial meltdown in the second half of 1997, there appeared to be prospects for an uneasy consensus on the East Asian "miracle," a consensus that recognized the role of the entrepreneurial state in accelerating industrial development but emphasized the "market-friendly" nature of the state's interventions.
After the financial crisis, East Asian policies and institutions are once again under scrutinyfor their failures rather than for their miracles.
Mody finds that the prospects for a consensus that incorporated the East Asian experience were ill founded. East Asian policymakers emphasized growth through quantitative targets; price signals played a significant but secondary role.
Mody illustrates these propositions by examining trade policy, industrial conglomerates, and the provision of physical infrastructure.
The evolving international consensus on industrial policy, which predates the Asian crisis, emphasizes a hands-off approach in which an activist government plays a reduced role and competition policy plays an important role.
But policies emphasizing greater competition and a level playing fieldimplicitly thought to require less government actionmay require more government expertise, not less. If implementing a 10 percent export subsidy is difficult, consider the difficulty of determining whether a firm is exercising market power or restraining trade.
So the prospect of governments stepping back may be unrealistic.
The new consensus also proposes "deep integration," or the adoption of uniform standards in such areas as competition policy and labor and environmental standards.
For East Asia, the shift to the international consensus may be appropriate because government-driven growth has declined in intellectual respectability. Also, it may be time to consolidate the gains from the rapid trade-led growth by focusing on creating a stronger incentive structure for efficiently using resources.
The current consensus is based on strong priors rather than on solid empirical evidence, however, and the dangers of international uniformity in policy are evident.
This papera product of the Development Prospects Groupis part of a larger effort in the group to analyze trends in the global economy. Copies of the paper are available free from the World Bank, 1818 H Street NW, Washington, DC 20433. Please contact Sydnella Kpundeh, room MC6-762, telephone 202-473-9591, fax 202-522-2578, Internet address skpundeh@worldbank.org. The author may be contacted at amody@worldbank.org. (33 pages)
The full report is available in PDF format.