1. World problems
  2. Depressed industries

Depressed industries

  • Industries in difficulty
  • Outmoded industries
  • Decline in industry competitiveness
  • Declining industrial sectors
  • Older industries
  • Ageing industrial sectors
  • Vulnerable industries

Nature

Decline may stem primarily from the emergence of a cost-effective domestic substitute, in which case it is questionable whether any efforts should be made to modernize the outmoded industry or to protect it from foreign competition. In the case of trade-impacted industries making undifferentiated products in which costs alone determine sales, major declines inevitably resulted when the industries lost competitiveness. But the chronic adjustment problem for threatened industries is not a failure to move resources out of declining industries but rather that of adjustment within sectors and firms.

Background

There are two extreme views of the structural adjustment process. That typical of economists sees changes in comparative economic advantage as being permanent, suggesting that once competitiveness is lost it is rarely, if ever, regained. That typical of the political perspective assumes that government policies can restore almost any industry to competitiveness. In practice neither process is entirely applicable.

Broader

Narrower

Aggravates

Aggravated by

Strategy

Value

Vulnerability
Yet to rate
Outmoded
Yet to rate
Difficulty
Yet to rate
Depression
Yet to rate
Decline
Yet to rate
Competition [D]
Yet to rate
Age
Yet to rate

Reference

SDG

Sustainable Development Goal #3: Good Health and Well-beingSustainable Development Goal #10: Reduced InequalitySustainable Development Goal #12: Responsible Consumption and Production

Metadata

Database
World problems
Type
(D) Detailed problems
Subject
  • Individuation » Psychoanalysis
  • Industry » Industry
  • Societal problems » Obsolescence
  • Societal problems » Vulnerability
  • Society » Elderly
  • Content quality
    Presentable
     Presentable
    Language
    English
    Last update
    Oct 4, 2020