Import Substitution Strategy
(Redirected from Import substitution industrialization)
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
An Import Substitution Strategy is an industrial development strategy that promotes domestic production to replace imported goods through protective trade policies and industrial support measures.
- AKA: Import Substitution Industrialization, ISI Strategy, Inward-Looking Development Strategy, Import Replacement Policy.
- Context:
- It can typically protect Infant Industries through high tariff barriers.
- It can typically develop Domestic Manufacturing Capacity via industrial policy instruments.
- It can typically reduce Import Dependency for strategic products.
- It can typically create Backward Linkages in domestic economies.
- It can typically generate Industrial Employment through local production.
- ...
- It can often result in Inefficient Production due to limited competition.
- It can often create Anti-Export Bias through currency overvaluation.
- It can often require Foreign Exchange Controls for import management.
- It can often lead to Technology Gaps from international isolation.
- ...
- It can range from being a Light Import Substitution Strategy to being a Heavy Import Substitution Strategy, depending on its industrial focus.
- It can range from being a Selective Import Substitution Strategy to being a Comprehensive Import Substitution Strategy, depending on its sectoral coverage.
- ...
- It can implement Protective Tariffs on consumer goods.
- It can establish Import Licensing Systems for quantity control.
- It can provide Subsidized Credit to domestic producers.
- It can create State-Owned Enterprises in strategic sectors.
- It can maintain Overvalued Exchange Rates for import cost reduction.
- ...
- Example(s):
- Latin American Import Substitution Strategies, such as:
- Asian Import Substitution Strategies, such as:
- African Import Substitution Strategies, such as:
- Sectoral Import Substitution Strategies, such as:
- ...
- Counter-Example(s):
- Export-Oriented Industrialization, which promotes production for international markets.
- Free Trade Strategy, which relies on comparative advantage without protection.
- Strategic Trade Policy, which selectively supports export industries rather than import replacement.
- See: Industrial Development Strategy, Trade Protection Measure, Infant Industry Protection, Economic Nationalism, Dependency Theory, Structuralist Economics, Development Economics.