I might have been tempted to agree with the motion statement if it were not as assertive as to include "always".
Like any other government sponsored policy directed at whichever sector, industrial policy may or may not succeed depending how well or ill devised and tracked it is.
There is enough evidence from around the world pointing to success stories as well as to monumental and costly failures.Whether or not the latter is in the majority - thus being representative - is the key question.
I believe a policy of some sort is indispensable for the industrial sector if only to set out strategic priorities or help retain existing industries in a country.
Unless of course it should be left wholly to markets to decide the fate of entire nations to go happily down the lane of irrelevancy.
To my mind it is all about striking the right balance between every controllable variable.
Germany is the best example of how a high-cost-structure economy, with social values, has succeeded keeping the industrial and engineering base largely intact.
German multinationals have production facilities worldwide but retained substantial production at home too.
The cumulative result of sound management practices by the private sector, the benefits of the social contract and last but not least formal industrial policy in place.
Or informal and unofficial yet largely enforced.
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