Following the financial crisis, the UK’s industrial policy consensus, that liberally regulated competitive markets were assumed to best determine the composition of economic activity, has come under strain. Martin Craig argues British governments must overcome their aversion to ‘picking winners’ and embrace their discretionary role
The 1980s were a turbulent time for west European manufacturers. New technologies were developed, wh...
Many existing accounts of the IMF crisis have argued that British policy was determined either by th...
BIS have launched their 'Make it in Great Britain' campaign highlighting the best in British Manufac...
Industrial policy has been on the agenda of British policy elites since the 2008 financial crisis, p...
The UK ‘industrial strategy’ had been purported as a flagship policy for post-Brexit Britain. It was...
The new UK prime minister, Theresa May, is promising to revive and indeed enhance the industrial pol...
In the wake of the financial crisis, many have called for the UK to rebalance its economy away from ...
A panel of economists, policymakers and business figures on a best practice industrial strateg
Selective industrial policy in the United Kingdom is conventionally believed to have vanished prior ...
The government's recent ditching of Theresa May's interventionist ‘Industrial Strategy’ and its repl...
Selective industrial policy in the United Kingdom is conventionally believed to have vanished prior ...
Industrial strategy is back on the government’s agenda, with a promise to produce a ‘match fit’ econ...
In the context of the UK economy’s slow and unbalanced growth, this paper discusses the degree to wh...
Unlike during the 2015 campaigns, the state of the economy is not at the forefront of this general e...
This article examines the responses of national governments to the economic crisis that commenced in...
The 1980s were a turbulent time for west European manufacturers. New technologies were developed, wh...
Many existing accounts of the IMF crisis have argued that British policy was determined either by th...
BIS have launched their 'Make it in Great Britain' campaign highlighting the best in British Manufac...
Industrial policy has been on the agenda of British policy elites since the 2008 financial crisis, p...
The UK ‘industrial strategy’ had been purported as a flagship policy for post-Brexit Britain. It was...
The new UK prime minister, Theresa May, is promising to revive and indeed enhance the industrial pol...
In the wake of the financial crisis, many have called for the UK to rebalance its economy away from ...
A panel of economists, policymakers and business figures on a best practice industrial strateg
Selective industrial policy in the United Kingdom is conventionally believed to have vanished prior ...
The government's recent ditching of Theresa May's interventionist ‘Industrial Strategy’ and its repl...
Selective industrial policy in the United Kingdom is conventionally believed to have vanished prior ...
Industrial strategy is back on the government’s agenda, with a promise to produce a ‘match fit’ econ...
In the context of the UK economy’s slow and unbalanced growth, this paper discusses the degree to wh...
Unlike during the 2015 campaigns, the state of the economy is not at the forefront of this general e...
This article examines the responses of national governments to the economic crisis that commenced in...
The 1980s were a turbulent time for west European manufacturers. New technologies were developed, wh...
Many existing accounts of the IMF crisis have argued that British policy was determined either by th...
BIS have launched their 'Make it in Great Britain' campaign highlighting the best in British Manufac...