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A Critical Reflection on Irish Industrial Policy: A Strategic Choice Approach
Authors:David Bailey  Helena Lenihan
Affiliation:1. Economics and Strategy Group, Aston Business School, Aston University, Birmingham, UK;2. d.bailey@aston.ac.uk;3. Department of Economics, Kemmy Business School, University of Limerick, Ireland;4. helena.lenihan@ul.ie
Abstract:This paper offers a critical evaluation of recent Irish industrial policy (IP) experience. It argues that whilst Ireland managed to get some things “right” through its IP, substantial tensions arose through making foreign direct investment (FDI) attraction the centrepiece of policy, without at the same time adopting a more holistic approach in IP which inter alia also placed an emphasis on indigenous firms and entrepreneurship more generally. In particular, greater efforts should have been made much earlier in attempting to embed transnational corporation (TNC)-led activity better into the wider economy, in fostering domestic small firms and entrepreneurship, in promoting clusters, and more generally in evaluating IP more fully – notwithstanding the context which mitigated against such actions. As a result, Ireland as an economy remained vulnerable to strategic decisions made elsewhere by TNC decision makers, with IP effectively contributing to a situation that can be characterised as institutional and strategic failure. Overall, the paper suggests that wholesale emulation of the Irish IP approach is problematic.
Keywords:Ireland  Industrial Policy  Foreign Direct Investment (FDI)  Transnational Corporations (TNCs)  Policy Evaluation  Strategic Choice.
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