Special report | Redividing the world

Governments across the world are discovering “homeland economics”

But introducing industrial policy is a big mistake, argues Callum Williams

Image: Edward Burtynsky/courtesy Flowers Gallery. Phosphor Tailings Pond #4, Near Lakeland, Florida, USA.

For a while, after the end of the cold war, it looked like the world really might be becoming a little bit more like the fabled global village. Motivated by a belief in the power of markets, globalisation took off in the 1990s. Governments loosened controls on travel, investment and trade. In 2001 China acceded to the World Trade Organisation, turbocharging trade between Asia and the West. The changes brought many benefits, reducing poverty and inequality, and were accompanied by a growing political freedom worldwide (see chart).

Image: The Economist

This article appeared in the Special report section of the print edition under the headline "Redividing the world"

Are free markets history? The rise of homeland economics

From the October 7th 2023 edition

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