Truly Right View
  • Politics
    • All
    • Political Campaigning
    • Trump 2024
    The White House’s effort for an India-Pakistan ceasefire

    The White House’s effort for an India-Pakistan ceasefire

    Our American Pope – The American Conservative

    States support parents in legal case over school’s secret gender transition of child

    States support parents in legal case over school’s secret gender transition of child

    NJ Dem Deletes History of Love for the Left: Fox News Politics Newsletter for May 9, 2025

    NJ Dem Deletes History of Love for the Left: Fox News Politics Newsletter for May 9, 2025

    Trump supporter stands up to Letitia James, asks: ‘Will you apologize?’

    Trump supporter stands up to Letitia James, asks: ‘Will you apologize?’

    Pope Leo XIV is a Cubs fan, a Catholic priest in Chicago says

    Pope Leo XIV is a Cubs fan, a Catholic priest in Chicago says

    Boise, Salt Lake City adopt the pride flag as official symbols

    Boise, Salt Lake City adopt the pride flag as official symbols

    Politics

    By Any Name, A Day For Remembering—and Building  

    Taxpayers in New York could be on the hook for Letitia James’ legal bills

    Taxpayers in New York could be on the hook for Letitia James’ legal bills

    Politics

    Is ‘Woke Right’ a Useful Term?

    Trending Tags

    • MAGA 2024
    • Donald Trump 2024
    • Trump Campaign
    • Trump 2024
    • US Elections
    • US Politics
    • Political Agenda
    • Political Corruption
    • Political Prisoners
    • Political Party
    • Biden 2024
    • Biden Voter Fraud
    • Biden Energy Policy
    • Biden Family Business Dealings
    • Trump 2024
    • US Elections
  • Real News
    Politics

    Transgender Suspect Arrested in Stabbing Death

    Politics

    Canada’s Trudeau Facing Liberal Revolt

    The Real Reason They Hate President Donald Trump

    The Real Reason They Hate President Donald Trump

    MAGA 2024 Or Bust

    MAGA 2024 Or Bust

    Trending Tags

    • Vaccines
    • Vaccine Side Effects
    • Censorship
    • Election Fraud
    • Election Integrity
    • 2024 US Election
    • Deep State
    • About Truly Right View
    • Truth Exposed
    • Vaccine Issues
    • Censorship
    • Election Fraud
    • US Deep State Coup
    • US Health Services
    • Climate Hoax
    • 2000 Mules Video
  • Trusted News
    • All
    • Blaze Media
    • Epoch Times
    • One American News
    • Tucker Carlson Truths
    Trump Campaign Alleged Email Hack Tied to Growing Global Conflict

    Trump Campaign Alleged Email Hack Tied to Growing Global Conflict

    CCP Plans to ‘Activate Agents’ to Export Persecution Onto US Soil

    CCP Plans to ‘Activate Agents’ to Export Persecution Onto US Soil

    How the CCP’s Overseas Spy Operations Work

    How the CCP’s Overseas Spy Operations Work

    CCP Instigating Regime Overthrow in Bangladesh?

    CCP Instigating Regime Overthrow in Bangladesh?

    Global Stock Market Meltdown a Signal of More to Come?

    Global Stock Market Meltdown a Signal of More to Come?

    Is the US Military Actually Unable to Defeat China?

    Is the US Military Actually Unable to Defeat China?

    New Tariffs on China Incoming; Plot Thickens on Temu

    New Tariffs on China Incoming; Plot Thickens on Temu

    China’s Internet Is Being Erased as CCP Tests System to Monitor All Online Activity

    China’s Internet Is Being Erased as CCP Tests System to Monitor All Online Activity

    CCP’s ‘New Order’ Works On Threats, Terror, Crime, and Deception | Crossroads

    CCP’s ‘New Order’ Works On Threats, Terror, Crime, and Deception | Crossroads

    How a Chinese Olympic Doping Scandal Turned Into a Conspiracy Against the US and EU

    How a Chinese Olympic Doping Scandal Turned Into a Conspiracy Against the US and EU

    Trending Tags

    • Tucker Carlson
    • Crossroads With Joshua Philipp
    • Glen Beck
    • Live Q&A Joshua Philipp
    • American Thought Leaders
    • Facts Matter
    • Over The Target
    • China In Focus
    • The Epoch Times
    • Blaze Media
    • Blaze TV
    • NTD
    • NTD Evening News
    • One America News Network
    • Tucker Carlson Truths
    • Epoch Times
    • Crossroads with Joshua Philipp
    • Crossroads Live Q&A with Joshua Philipp
    • Blaze Media
    • Glenn Beck
    • Steve Deace Show
    • Sara Gonzales Unfiltered
    • Chad Prather Show
    • Fearless with Jason Whitlock
    • One American News
    • NTD
    • NTD News Today
  • Laugh With Us
    Joe Rogan | This Past Weekend w/ Theo Von #403

    Joe Rogan | This Past Weekend w/ Theo Von #403

    Shane Gillis Live In Austin | Stand Up Comedy

    Shane Gillis Live In Austin | Stand Up Comedy

    Tom Segura: Completely Normal

    Tom Segura: Completely Normal

    Nikki Glaser: Perfect – Full Special

    Nikki Glaser: Perfect – Full Special

    Bill Burr on Women for 20 minutes straight.

    Bill Burr on Women for 20 minutes straight.

    “Whole Country is Turned into B*tch Ass N***ga” – Dave Chappelle.

    “Whole Country is Turned into B*tch Ass N***ga” – Dave Chappelle.

    Bill Burr: “I’ll Never Own a Helicopter” – Full Special

    Bill Burr: “I’ll Never Own a Helicopter” – Full Special

    Bill Burr comedy on Black People.

    Bill Burr comedy on Black People.

    Lost Laughter: The Cultural Void Without Cheech & Chong

    *BLAZING SADDLES*(1974) is made for me😂 Reaction & Commentary

    Trending Tags

    • Dave Chappelle
    • Theo Von
    • Comedy Club
    • Cheech & Chong
    • Political Comedy
    • Comedians
    • Funny
    • Funny Women
    • Babylon Bee Comedy
    • Babylon Bee
    • Funny Movies
    • Humor
    • Political Humor
  • Be Prepared!

    Our American Pope – The American Conservative

    Politics

    “It’s About Time,” Sheriff Comments On Arresting Rogue Judges – Liberty Sentinel

    Politics

    By Any Name, A Day For Remembering—and Building  

    Politics

    Democrat States Targeting Homeschoolers – Liberty Sentinel

    Politics

    Is ‘Woke Right’ a Useful Term?

    Politics

    Watch The American Spectator Editor Paul Kengor’s Remarks on Marxism and International Women’s Day – The American Spectator | USA News and PoliticsThe American Spectator

    Politics

    My Little Chickadee: Six Years, Nine Months, and 24 Days With a Los Angeles-based Rooster – The American Spectator | USA News and PoliticsThe American Spectator

    Politics

    Deconstructing Childhood Through Thought Reform – Liberty Sentinel

    Politics

    Trump’s Russia–Ukraine Reset

    Politics

    Christian Evangelist Born Without Limbs Gets Debanked for Being Pro-Life – Liberty Sentinel

    Trending Tags

    • Restoring America
    • Government Corruption
    • Government Censorship
    • China Virus
    • Religious Freedom
    • Food Crisis
    • Invasion
    • Prepper
    • Emergency Preparedness
    • Restoring America
    • Government Corruption
    • Gods Plan
    • Economic Financial Collapse
    • Survival Plans
  • Patriot Shop
    • Patriot Clothing Gear Spotlights
    • Survival Apparel
    • Survival Gear
  • Truly Right View
No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • Register
Truly Right View
No Result
View All Result
Truly Right View
No Result
View All Result

Missing the Trees for the Forest in Industrial Policy

by SiteAdmin
August 31, 2024
in Department of Education, Survival Plans, US Health Services
5.2k
0
Politics
3.8k
SHARES
7.5k
VIEWS

Industrial Policy for the United States: Winning the Competition for Good Jobs and High-Value Industries, by Marc Fasteau and Ian Fletcher. 849 pages with index. Cambridge University Press 2024.

Although many (including this writer) will reject its conclusions, Fasteau and Fletcher’s compendium, Industrial Policy for the United States: Winning the Competition for Good Jobs and High-Value Industries, will serve as the standard reference work on industrial policy in the foreseeable future. Its 800 pages provide a thorough survey of all the major economies’ experience with government planning, including a sober assessment of successes and failures. They rightly emphasize the key role of military R&D. Nonetheless, they miss the trees for the forest, so to speak—namely, the singular contributions of maverick inventors. Innovation can’t be budgeted and scheduled, only fostered and encouraged. And that depends on a delicate balance between government support and private initiative.

The authors want the government to remake the economy, with a new corps of federal officials empowered to direct investment to favored industries. In their enthusiasm, they ignore the gross deficiencies of the most ambitious piece of industrial policy in decades, namely the Biden CHIPS and Science Act of 2022. And they naively propose a devaluation of the U.S. dollar to promote exports without considering the ways in which cheapening the currency adversely affects manufacturing. 

“In 2021 and 2022, Biden proposed and Congress enacted the Bipartisan Infrastructure Act (BIA), the CHIPS and Science Act (CHIPS), and the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA). These ambitious new programs, combined with their explicitly pro-industrial policy rationales, were a big step forward,” the authors write. They worry that the $170 billion CHIPS Act wasn’t big enough: “The Act was a major advance, but the aid it provides, while sizeable, is dwarfed by that provided by Taiwan, Korea, and China.”

A graph of construction jobs

Description automatically generated

The CHIPS Act subsidies prompted $450 billion in planned investments, according to the Semiconductor Industry Association, but the industry encountered crippling shortages of skilled labor, engineers, and infrastructure. The cost of building new industrial plants jumped by 30 percent in little more than a year, and unfilled construction job openings jumped to an all-time record in 2023. Plant openings by TSMC, Samsung, and other fabricators were delayed by years. Intel took $8.5 billion in subsidies under the CHIPS Act and shortly thereafter laid off 15,000 workers and cut capital expenditures by 20 percent.

The CHIPS Act turned out to be a horrible example of how industrial policy can go wrong. Apart from its shoddy implementation, Biden’s venture into industrial policy failed to encourage research into new semiconductor technologies that promise increases of computing speed by orders of magnitude. The authors discuss molecular electronics, which, if successful, will create circuits from individual molecules rather than silicon wafers, but do not mention the absence of support for such technologies in the CHIPS Act.

Perhaps the serried ranks of federal officials proposed by the authors would have foreseen these bottlenecks, but Fasteau and Fletcher did not. The term “skilled labor” appears just five times in the book and only once with reference to the United States. American manufacturers invariably cite the lack of skilled personnel as the single biggest constraint on expansion. A worker with a high school diploma and a year’s training can earn $60,000 a year operating a computer-controlled machine, but this work requires proficiency in high-school math (for example, trigonometry). Less than a quarter of American high school students are rated proficient, according to the Department of Education, and they aren’t looking for factory work.

The authors mention Germany’s apprenticeship system as an element of that country’s industrial policy, but are silent about the abysmal state of American secondary education. High schools used to teach industrial skills; I still have the draftsman set my father used at a Brooklyn public school before starting as a machinist’s apprentice at the Brooklyn Navy Yard. Nor do Fasteau and Fletcher mention that just seven percent of US undergraduates major in engineering, vs. a third in China, which now graduates 1.2 million engineers each year, vs. 200,000 in the United States. They provide detailed reports of university programs in quantum computing and nanotechnology, but ignore the biggest single problem now facing American industry.

The role of the military in promoting innovation is a central theme in their account. “The shadow of Mars is long,” they observe. “The Englishman Henry Bessemer,” who invented modern steelmaking, “had been trying to make a cannon strong enough to fire new rifled artillery shells.” They rightly draw attention to the national security imperative in inspiring innovation, but their account has an important lacuna.

A set of breakthroughs in the 1970s—optical networks, CMOS manufacturing of integrated circuits, and the Internet, among others—that launched the Digital Age. As former Deputy Secretary of Defense Bob Work explained:

In 1973, the Yom Kippur War provided dramatic evidence of advances in surface-to-air missiles, and Israel’s most advanced fighters, flown by the top pilots in the Middle East, if not among the world’s best, lost their superiority for at least three days due to a SAM belt. And Israeli armored forces were savaged by ATGMs, antitank guided munitions.

U.S. analysts cranked their little models and extrapolated that [if] the balloon went up in Europe’s central front and we had suffered attrition rates comparable to the Israelis, U.S. tactical air power would be destroyed within 17 days, and NATO would literally run out of tanks.

Vietnam fell two years later, and the American military went back to the drawing boards. By 1978, advances in chip manufacturing put into the cockpits of fighter planes computers that could run lookdown radar. By 1982, American avionics helped Israel to destroy the Syrian air force in the Beqaa Valley “turkey shoot.”

Their account of the role of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) and other government agencies in promoting industrial innovation is extensive, although it misses some decisive points.

Part of the problem is that federal R&D funding has shrunk as a share of government spending and GDP. “Federally funded R&D—the spending that generates fundamental technological breakthroughs—peaked at 1.9 percent of GDP in 1962, fell to 0.7 percent by 2020, and as of mid-2024 is only at the beginning of a possible turnaround,” they note. DARPA funding made possible Sergei Brin and Larry Page’s Google search algorithm, the voice recognition system later branded as Apple’s Siri, the Internet, the analog-to-digital transformation that enabled the smartphone, as well as GPS, stealth technology, night vision, smart weapons and a vast number of other innovations.

When the U.S. military is compelled to innovate as a matter of national security, it funds research at the frontier of physics. This puts technology in the hands of entrepreneurs who want to create new products. The Achilles’ heel of industrial policy is rent-seeking by corporations. When technology changes incrementally, industry easily corrupts the officials responsible for doling out federal money by offering them future employment. But when national security demands breakthroughs at the frontier of physics, entrepreneurs gain access to technology that challenges the existing business structure. That is what happened during the 1980s, when startups like Cisco, Intel, Apple, and Oracle became the new corporate giants.

Federal bureaucrats do a poor job of picking winners in the business world, and they don’t do a good job of forecasting technological breakthroughs, either. Although virtually every important innovation of the Digital Age began with DARPA funding, the most important of these inventions had little to do with the initial motivation for the project. An example related by Dr. Henry Kressel, the former head of RCA Labs, is the semiconductor laser: The military wanted to illuminate battlefields for night fighting. Kressel and his team took DARPA’s money and perfected a laser that could transmit vast quantities of information through optical cables, making the Internet possible. 

Maverick engineers with a mind of their own rather than federal planners discovered the most important innovations. The great corporate labs at RCA, IBM, GE, and the Bell System formed half of a public-private partnership, in which the government paid for basic research, but private capital took the risk of commercialization. 

Fasteau and Fletcher draw attention to America’s declining share of manufacturing in GDP and its widening trade deficit. They propose withdrawing from the World Trade Organization, rejecting any new free trade agreements, and raising tariffs, along with a devaluation of the U.S. dollar. They caution against disruptive, sudden action:

Tariff rate quotas and tariffs phased in over time should be used to nurture industries the U.S. is attempting to develop, is in danger of losing, or is trying to regain. For example, the federal government’s current $54 billion effort to rebuild U.S. capability in semiconductors should be supported by a staged tariff and quota policy. Said policy should track along with and protect the development of American production capacity, but not prematurely burden US users of advanced chips that domestic manufacturers are not yet capable of making.

Caution is called for indeed, given that we now import most of our capital goods. To reduce dependence on imports, we must invest in new capacity, which means increasing imports of capital goods for some years before replacing them with domestic production in the future. 

Less convincing is the authors’ plaidoyer for a cheap dollar. The steepest decline in manufacturing employment in U.S. history occurred during the 2000s while the US dollar’s real effective exchange rate fell sharply. That does not imply that a falling dollar caused the decline in employment, but rather that more important factors were at work. Perhaps the most important price point in capital-intensive investment is the cost of capital itself. Stable currencies generally are associated with a low cost of capital, because currency depreciation promotes inflation, and inflation adds both a surcharge and a risk premium to the cost of capital. 

Subscribe Today

Get daily emails in your inbox

When corporations write investments off taxable income over years, inflation reduces the value of depreciation, and thus increases the effective corporate tax rate. For that matter, Fasteau and Fletcher praise Japan’s use of accelerated depreciation to promote investment, but have nothing to say about the subject as it might apply to the United States. Tax relief for investment might prove a more effective incentive for manufacturing investment than tariffs. 

Despite these flaws, Industrial Policy for the United States belongs in the library of every policymaker concerned about the state of U.S. industry. 

Shop For Night Vision | See more…


Shop For Survival Gear | See more…

  • Sale! Shooting Vests

    Mesh Shooting Hunting Vest with Multi Pockets

    $59.99 Original price was: $59.99.$39.99Current price is: $39.99.
    Add to cart
  • Sale! Compass

    Portable Pocket Brass Copper Navigation Compass with Noctilucence Display

    $19.99 Original price was: $19.99.$9.99Current price is: $9.99.
    Add to cart
  • Sale! Shooting Vests

    Tactical Camo Nylon Body Armor Hunting Vest With Pouch

    $49.99 Original price was: $49.99.$39.99Current price is: $39.99.
    Select options This product has multiple variants. The options may be chosen on the product page
 
Tags: CHIPS Actindustrial policyJoe BidenTruly Right View
Previous Post

From Woke to Awakened — RFK Jr.’s Running Mate: The Media Lied to Me About MAGA

Next Post

Pandering to Muslims, U.K. Leftists Are Suppressing Another Part of British Culture

Next Post
Politics

Pandering to Muslims, U.K. Leftists Are Suppressing Another Part of British Culture

Please login to join discussion

Product Categories

  • Apparel & Accessories (6)
  • Camping Gear (8)
  • Gifts and Other (3)
  • Gloves (1)
  • Gun Parts (2)
  • Gun Storage (1)
  • Guns & Ammo (1)
  • Health & Fitness (4)
  • Holsters (3)
  • Hunting and Shooting Vests (3)
  • Hunting Gear (11)
  • Knives (2)
  • Laser Sights (1)
  • Mens and Womens Apparel (2)
  • Night Vision Accessories (1)
  • Outdoor Gear (4)
  • Pets (1)
  • Red Dot Sights (1)
  • Red Dot Sights & Accessories (1)
  • Security Products (1)
  • Shooting Accessories (3)
  • Sporting Goods (6)
  • Sports Equipment (2)
  • Sports/Outdoors (8)
  • Survival Gear (4)
  • Tactical Gear (4)
  • Trump 2024 (9)

Products

  • trump 2024 shirts Trump 2024 Take America Back Eagle T-Shirts $19.99 Original price was: $19.99.$12.99Current price is: $12.99.
  • trump 2024 hat Trump MAGA Embroidered Make America Great Again Hat $19.99 Original price was: $19.99.$12.99Current price is: $12.99.
  • trump 2024 tumbler 2024 Trump Save America Again Coffee Mug 11 Oz $19.99 Original price was: $19.99.$12.99Current price is: $12.99.
  • trump 2024 baseball cap Donald Trump 2024 Make America Great Again Hat $14.99 Original price was: $14.99.$9.99Current price is: $9.99.
  • trump stickers 2024 Trump 2024 The Revenge Tour Stickers $14.99 Original price was: $14.99.$8.99Current price is: $8.99.
Truly Right View

© 2025 Truly Right View

Navigate Site

  • Politics
  • Real News
  • Trusted News
  • Laugh With Us
  • Be Prepared!
  • Patriot Shop
  • Truly Right View

Follow Us

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

*By registering into our website, you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.
All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Politics
    • Trump 2024
    • US Elections
  • Real News
    • About Truly Right View
    • Truth Exposed
    • Vaccine Issues
    • Censorship
    • Election Fraud
    • US Deep State Coup
    • US Health Services
    • Climate Hoax
    • 2000 Mules Video
  • Trusted News
    • Tucker Carlson Truths
    • Epoch Times
    • Crossroads with Joshua Philipp
    • Crossroads Live Q&A with Joshua Philipp
    • Blaze Media
    • Glenn Beck
    • Steve Deace Show
    • Sara Gonzales Unfiltered
    • Chad Prather Show
    • Fearless with Jason Whitlock
    • One American News
    • NTD
    • NTD News Today
  • Laugh With Us
  • Be Prepared!
    • Restoring America
    • Government Corruption
    • Gods Plan
    • Economic Financial Collapse
    • Survival Plans
  • Patriot Shop
    • Patriot Clothing Gear Spotlights
    • Survival Apparel
    • Survival Gear
  • Truly Right View

© 2025 Truly Right View

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used.