Taylor, Lance2019-09-252019-09-252011-06-202001-09-07http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/179297"The point (based on non-formalized historical/institutional reasoning by people like Amsden, Wade, and Chang) that hands-on interventionist policies have played an essential role in supporting industrialization and growth in both now-rich and poor countries has also sunk in. This is not to say that analyses of industrial policy and sensible protectionism dominate mainstream discourse - of course they do not - but that conventional wisdom has been on the defensive at least since the Bank’s East Asian Miracle report. Again, there is a beachhead to be expanded."(pg 2)engWith permission of the license/copyright holderdevelopment ethicsjustice, economicEconomic ethicsEthics of economic systemsLabour/professional ethicsTechnology ethicsConsumer ethicsNotes on development economicsPreprint