Industrial Policy Since the Great Financial Crisis
October 31, 2025
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Summary
This paper extends the New Industrial Policy Observatory (NIPO) dataset from 2009 to 2023 by employing large language model techniques to identify policy motivations. We document widespread industrial policy adoption across advanced and emerging market economies since the Great Financial Crisis, which was implemented primarily through subsidies and trade restrictions. We identify a structural break around 2020, characterized by accelerated policy activity and the emergence of “new industrial policies” motivated by supply chain resilience, national security, and geopolitical concerns, in addition to policies focused on competitiveness and climate objectives, which were already prevalent in previous years. Policies have targeted dual-use and various advanced technology sectors, as well as their upstream inputs, such as critical raw materials and minerals. We find that geopolitical risk and tit-for-tat retaliation have played a greater role in driving industrial policy after 2020, and that this support extends beyond existing sectors of comparative advantage.
Subject: Comparative advantage, Exports, Imports, International trade, Trade policy
Keywords: Asia and Pacific, Comparative advantage, Data, Exports, Global, IMF department, IMF working papers, Imports, Industrial Policy, Policy instrument, policy intervention, Policy motive, Trade Policy
Pages:
35
Volume:
2025
DOI:
Issue:
222
Series:
Working Paper No. 2025/222
Stock No:
WPIEA2025222
ISBN:
9798229027786
ISSN:
1018-5941
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