Special reports

The world economy

Homeland Economics

Special reports -

Governments across the world are rediscovering industrial policy. They are making a big mistake, argues Callum Williams

Redividing the world

Governments across the world are discovering “homeland economics”

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

Workers in a factory in Zhejiang Province, China.

Demand for supplies

Attempts to make supply chains “resilient” are likely to fail

And they are likely to be costly

Workers on an assembly line in a chicken processing plant, in Dehui City, Jilin Province, China.

State v market

“Homeland economics” will make the world poorer

Industrial policy and protectionism could endanger trade, without making Western economies safer

Plastic in a landfill in Kenya.

Missing the point

New industrial policies will make the world more unequal

Workers in the developing world will especially lose out

Cerro Dominador Solar Project in Atacama Desert, Chile.

Second-best

Green protectionism comes with big risks

Some analysts worry that new laws could slow the green transition

In search of a problem

New industrial policies will not help economic stability

Globalisation has not been perfect but it has been effective

Shandong's Import and Export Growth to BRICS Countries

Insight

Video: Busting globalisation myths

How our correspondent followed his hunch about protectionism 

The world economy

Sources and acknowledgments

Previous report

Warfare after Ukraine

Battlefield lessons

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The war shows how technology is changing the battlefield. But mass still counts, argues Shashank Joshi