Finance and economics | Free exchange

Warnings from history for a new era of industrial policy

The danger is not that America’s reshoring push fails—but that it succeeds

“Free trade is almost dead,” declared Morris Chang, the founder of tsmc, dampening the mood at an event in December to celebrate a milestone in the building of the Taiwanese chipmaker’s new fab in Arizona. The remark was not out of character. In July he called America’s effort to bring chipmaking home an “exercise in futility”. Until recently, rich-world governments mostly shared his judgment. But worries about supply-chain security in a fraught world are prompting experimentation. History provides some reasons for optimism—as well as many for concern.

This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Picking losers”

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From the January 14th 2023 edition

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