![]() What would you say?Ĭountry A: Until a decade ago, the country was highly protectionist, with an average industrial tariff rate well above 30 per cent. You are an economic analyst trying to assess their development prospects. Here are the profiles of two developing countries. Free-market policies have made few countries rich so far and will make few rich in the future. With only a few exceptions, all of today’s rich countries, including Britain and the US – the supposed homes of free trade and free market – have become rich through the combinations of protectionism, subsidies and other policies that today they advise the developing countries not to adopt. ![]() Moreover, it is also not true that almost all rich countries have become rich through free-market policies. There were some spectacular failures of state intervention, but most of these countries grew much faster, with more equitable income distribution and far fewer financial crises, during the ‘bad old days’ than they have done in the period of market-oriented reforms. Thing 7: Free-market Policies Rarely Make Poor Countries RichĬontrary to what is commonly believed, the performance of developing countries in the period of state-led development was superior to what they have achieved during the subsequent period of market-oriented reform. The following is an excerpt from University of Cambridge economist Ha-Joon Chang's recent book, 23 Things They Don't Tell You About Capitalism. Do Free Market Policies Lead to Economic Stagnation? ![]()
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