The New Economic Nationalism

The New Economic Nationalism

$25.00

Publication Date: 15th April 2025

Can the new economic nationalism of industrial policy, tariffs, and various methods of state support for the economy deliver stability, national security, and prosperity? Read More
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Can the new economic nationalism of industrial policy, tariffs, and various methods of state support for the economy deliver stability, national security, and prosperity? Read More
Description
Empires, city states, and nations have long pursued aggressive trade, tax, and investment policies to amass wealth. A new consensus emerged after the Great Depression and World War II supporting liberalized international trade, economic cooperation, and free markets. Today that consensus has shattered, replaced by a “new economic nationalism” of industrial policy, tariffs, and various methods of state support for the economy. Can this new approach deliver stability, national security, and prosperity? This book examines case studies revealing a decidedly mixed record. In some instances, economic nationalist policies have fostered growth and declining unemployment, though accompanied by fiscal costs and inefficiency. In much of the developing world, however, economic nationalist policies have produced corruption, debt burdens, inflation, and ultimately stagnation. By examining the past, The New Economic Nationalism provides a roadmap to an uncertain future.
Details
  • Price: $25.00
  • Pages: 412
  • Publisher: Peterson Institute for International Economics
  • Imprint: Peterson Institute for International Economics
  • Publication Date: 15th April 2025
  • Trim Size: 6 x 9 in
  • Illustration Note: 16 b&w charts; 35 b&w figures
  • ISBN: 9780881327557
  • Format: Paperback
  • BISACs:
    BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Economics / Social & Behavioral
    BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Economic History
Author Bio

Monica de Bolle is a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics. She is the host of Policy for the Planet, a PIIE podcast about economics, public health, and climate adaptation. She is also a professor at Georgetown University and was director for Latin American studies and emerging markets at the School of Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University.

Jérémie Cohen-Setton worked at Bruegel and Her Majesty’s Treasury before joining the Peterson Institute for International Economics, where he contributed to this book and also coedited Sustaining Economic Growth in Asia (2018, with Thomas Helbling, Adam S. Posen, and Changyong Rhee). (He subsequently joined the International Monetary Fund [IMF] as a senior economist in the Independent Evaluation Office. The views in this book are his own and those of other coauthors and should not be attributed to the IMF or any organization or entity mentioned herein.)

Madi Sarsenbayev is an economist with research interests in macroeconomic policy, international finance, and economic development. He worked at the Peterson Institute for International Economics from 2018 to 2022 and contributed to this book during that time.

Empires, city states, and nations have long pursued aggressive trade, tax, and investment policies to amass wealth. A new consensus emerged after the Great Depression and World War II supporting liberalized international trade, economic cooperation, and free markets. Today that consensus has shattered, replaced by a “new economic nationalism” of industrial policy, tariffs, and various methods of state support for the economy. Can this new approach deliver stability, national security, and prosperity? This book examines case studies revealing a decidedly mixed record. In some instances, economic nationalist policies have fostered growth and declining unemployment, though accompanied by fiscal costs and inefficiency. In much of the developing world, however, economic nationalist policies have produced corruption, debt burdens, inflation, and ultimately stagnation. By examining the past, The New Economic Nationalism provides a roadmap to an uncertain future.
  • Price: $25.00
  • Pages: 412
  • Publisher: Peterson Institute for International Economics
  • Imprint: Peterson Institute for International Economics
  • Publication Date: 15th April 2025
  • Trim Size: 6 x 9 in
  • Illustrations Note: 16 b&w charts; 35 b&w figures
  • ISBN: 9780881327557
  • Format: Paperback
  • BISACs:
    BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Economics / Social & Behavioral
    BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Economic History

Monica de Bolle is a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics. She is the host of Policy for the Planet, a PIIE podcast about economics, public health, and climate adaptation. She is also a professor at Georgetown University and was director for Latin American studies and emerging markets at the School of Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University.

Jérémie Cohen-Setton worked at Bruegel and Her Majesty’s Treasury before joining the Peterson Institute for International Economics, where he contributed to this book and also coedited Sustaining Economic Growth in Asia (2018, with Thomas Helbling, Adam S. Posen, and Changyong Rhee). (He subsequently joined the International Monetary Fund [IMF] as a senior economist in the Independent Evaluation Office. The views in this book are his own and those of other coauthors and should not be attributed to the IMF or any organization or entity mentioned herein.)

Madi Sarsenbayev is an economist with research interests in macroeconomic policy, international finance, and economic development. He worked at the Peterson Institute for International Economics from 2018 to 2022 and contributed to this book during that time.