Towards an industrial policy for Scotland: A discussion of principles and approaches

Primary Author or Creator:
Iain Cairns
Additional Author(s) / Creators
Andrew Cumber,s Mike Danson, Iain Docherty, Pat Kane, Gordon Morgan, Robin McAlpine, Robert McMaster Willie Sullivan, Geoffrey Whittam
Alternative Published Date
March 2016
Category:
Type of Resource:
Policy Paper
Fast Facts

A mutual, sectoral model of industrial development rejects both ‘top down planning’ and ‘free market’ approaches. The form an economy takes is inevitably the result of political decision-making. Democracy must therefore extend to the economic sphere.

More details

This report proposes a mutual, sectoral model of industrial development and rejects both ‘top down planning’ and ‘free market’ approaches.

Our approach is based on the recognition that the economy is not a force ‘external’ to society, governed by its own set of abstract rules or laws. The form an economy takes is inevitably the result of political decision-making.

Democracy must therefore extend to the economic sphere to ensure that the outcomes of these political decisions are aligned with the aspirations of the people.

― An industrial policy begins from the view that the economy is not in some way separate from wider society or its hopes and aspirations. The prevailing view that the economy must be protected, isolated and immunised from democracy must be challenged if we wish to create an economy that works for citizens.

― A sectoral approach is required to promote an ‘interconnected economy’, in which different sectors ‘grow up together’. A good motto for this kind of industrial policy could be
‘no sector left behind’.

― Sector associations (such as those in the Nordic countries) are institutions which enable all the main players in an industry sector to work collectively to come up with common solutions to develop their sector for the benefit of all.

― It is important to be aware that Scotland simply does not have access to the economic policy tools that it would require to pursue a substantially different economic strategy. Most macroeconomic, regulatory, employment, social security, tax, immigration and trade powers remain reserved to Westminster and these will continue to be directed towards the wrong economic approaches until independence or such time as those tools are otherwise delivered.

― However, there remains a substantial range of actions which can be taken in Scotland to help induce the right kind of economic transformation and these can be assembled into a ‘toolkit’ of powers which sector associations can draw on in developing their proposals.

― A Common Weal economy actively encourages democratic experimentation with the structure of enterprises and sectors, including open source and ‘peer production’ business methods. Such an approach would be greatly aided by a news media industry that more effectively supports the generation, availability and circulation of new economic ideas.

English