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Import Substitution Development Strategy
(redirected from Import substitution)

   Also found in: Wikipedia 0.01 sec.
Import substitution development strategy
A development strategy followed by many Latin American countries and other LDCs that emphasize import substitution-accomplished through protectionism-as the route to economic growth.

Import Substitution Development Strategy
A development strategy whereby a government restricts or forbids the import of industrial material and subsidizes local material. For example, a country may not allow the import of refined oil and instead encourage development of local oil refineries. The ides behind this strategy is to make a less developed country less dependent on international assistance and foreign direct investment until such time as it is can absorb investment more easily and also trade its own products. This development strategy was followed in Latin America and some other regions for most of the mid and late 20th century. It has its theoretical foundations in Keynesian economics, though some analysts have claimed that each nation industrializing after the United Kingdom has followed some form of import substitution.


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We take great pride in such pioneering products that contribute to the economy through import substitution.
Ecco Newsprint chief executive, Marcus Moir, said he still believed there was a case to be made for import substitution - foreign newsprint accounts for around 60% of consumption in the UK - despite a downturn in demand.
However, import substitution studies don't take into account the impacts of such a switch on other communities--if Iowa grows more of its own vegetables, for example, the California farmers currently supplying those vegetables will lose out.
 
 
 
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