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The New Economic Nationalism

Author

Listed:
  • Monica de Bolle

    (Peterson Institute for International Economics)

  • Jeremie Cohen-Setton
  • Madi Sarsenbayev

Abstract

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 navigate an uncertain future.

Suggested Citation

  • Monica de Bolle & Jeremie Cohen-Setton & Madi Sarsenbayev, 2025. "The New Economic Nationalism," Peterson Institute Press: All Books, Peterson Institute for International Economics, number 7557.
  • Handle: RePEc:iie:ppress:7557
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