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  • Working Papers

    Orrego Zamudio, J.C. & O’Brien, T., 2025

    New Mexico’s Economy Over Time and Space

    This report examines New Mexico’s economy over more than a century to inform statewide and regional economic development efforts. By mapping both long-term trajectories and recent changes, the analysis is […]
    Growth Lab

    This report examines New Mexico’s economy over more than a century to inform statewide and regional economic development efforts. By mapping both long-term trajectories and recent changes, the analysis is designed to support effective strategies for state and local leaders as they seek to address persistent challenges, respond to new risks, and leverage unique opportunities across the state’s diverse economies.

    Long-Term Perspective (1900–2020)

    The first section of this report provides an overview of New Mexico’s longer-term growth path to understand how the past influences the present and future of the state economy. New Mexico’s population never accelerated like some of its neighbors and peers. Slowdowns and uneven growth meant that New Mexico never attracted people in the way that Arizona, Colorado, or Utah did. Recent population growth has been the slowest in the last 120 years for New Mexico, indicating important economic problems that have made people “vote with their feet” to leave the state. Population growth and migration patterns are always co-evolving with what is happening in the state economy. Early in the 20th century, New Mexico’s economy was centered on agriculture, and over the next century, New Mexico saw a uniquely precipitous drop in employment in this sector. New Mexico missed early waves of manufacturing-led industrialization that benefited other states. This likely indicates a limit on how much manufacturing growth is possible moving forward, as the state has fewer latent capabilities and assets than other states that historically had larger manufacturing sectors. Mining, including the extraction of oil and gas, grew to be a critical part of the New Mexican economy and government revenues, but never accounted for more than 10% of jobs. Government activity also grew to be a uniquely large part of the state economy in New Mexico because of both state and federal funding.

    Beneath the long-term statewide trends, New Mexico’s economy is striking for the variation of economic performance and drivers across the state. From a long-term perspective, many rural areas are still responding to major economic shocks to their sources of tradable income that often happened many decades ago. In an ideal world, major urban hubs would absorb the outmigration from regions that are losing population. However, as rural communities navigate these challenges, urban areas have not been in a strong enough position to absorb displaced populations from other parts of the state or in-migration from other states. As the state economy has evolved from industries that are rooted in place (such as agriculture and mining) to industries that thrive in more urban settings (such as professional services), the weaknesses of urban economies in New Mexico in comparison to other states stand out.

    Medium and Short-Term Perspective (1997-2024)

    Several of the challenges of New Mexico over the long-term have continued to play out over the last 25 years. New Mexico’s per capita growth has been relatively low, and its income level has fallen further behind other states, especially within the region. The period of 2005-17 was exceptionally weak, marked by several years of per capita contraction that cannot be explained by national patterns. Arguably, the most important problem over 2005-17 was that state and local government activity followed a procyclical pattern that made the downturn worse when fiscal policy could have been designed to partially offset the pain of the downturn. The decline in the state government activity appears to be driven by a significant drop in tax collection that was only partially cushioned by increased federal spending at the time. While New Mexico is now enjoying a period of more robust growth, an economic upswing since 2018 has yet to offset the effects of a prolonged stagnation. Past dynamics suggest that today’s “boom” in growth will likely be followed by a period of “bust”. Whether the current higher growth trajectory should be expected to continue hinges on the sustainability of current growth drivers and the potential for others to emerge.

    Again, beneath these state patterns, there is significant variation in economic performance across New Mexico’s regions.  A few urban counties, most of all Bernalillo County, drive the state’s overall economic activity, and their growth has lagged national trends. Counties across the state have growth patterns that are largely uncorrelated with each other. One can see the effects of state-level downturns across many counties, but state growth does not translate equally in all counties. In fact, some counties have grown in a negatively correlated way with statewide growth over the last 25 years. Depending on their local economic drivers, some counties are currently growing rapidly — for example, Lea and Eddy counties, which benefit directly from current oil and gas expansion in the Permian Basin. Several rural counties have seen growth, driven by different sectors in recent years, even as they face long-term pressures. Meanwhile, several urban economies are struggling to absorb population and labor. A deep dive into Albuquerque’s growth finds that an undersupply of housing is the most binding constraint today.

    Implications for Economic Strategy and Policy

    New Mexico is building on several strengths in its economic development strategy. Recent successes, including major business investments in Albuquerque and Las Cruces and the expansion of universal childcare and tuition-free college, mark important steps forward. The state has channeled a great part of its oil and gas windfalls into permanent funds, ensuring increased reserves for use in education, early childhood, and future flexibility. Annual distributions from these reserves now account for major shares of education spending, and they are projected to become an even larger part of the state budget. New Mexico has also had some success in targeting sectors for investment attraction and in a public push in site development and site readiness for investment. The state also faces new and recurring stressors, and this report has several implications for strategy moving forward. As federal funds recede, the state’s reserves are increasingly needed to offset cuts in healthcare, higher education, and other urgent areas, narrowing available fiscal space for new priorities. New Mexico has improved its ability to save revenues generated during the current resource boom, but it will also have to navigate spending tradeoffs. We suggest more deployment of the state’s fiscal resources to expand regional capacity to attract investment and actions to better address housing supply constraints in urban areas — both of which are small budget items in relation to existing priorities but with large potential gains. While New Mexico is moving in the right direction by targeting sectors and identifying key sites for development, the diversity of regional challenges and opportunities calls for greater regional tailoring. County-by-county analyses of diversification opportunities, using economic complexity methods, are available in this online repository. As for addressing labor supply constraints, investments in childcare and higher education effectively target long-term pressures on talent retention and attraction. However, the principal obstacle remains housing. There are state and local actions that can be taken to allow housing supply to better meet growing demand.

  • Reports

    Hausmann, R. & Ahuja, K., 2025

    Catalysing Economic Growth Through Powershoring

    Industry on the road to 2050, 40-51.

    In a trend called powershoring, energy-intensive industry will locate closer to renewable energy sources, driven by cheap renewable energy (which is difficult to transport), and the need to decarbonise. Regions’ […]
    Growth Lab

    In a trend called powershoring, energy-intensive industry will locate closer to renewable energy sources, driven by cheap renewable energy (which is difficult to transport), and the need to decarbonise. Regions’ renewable energy resources and industrial capabilities shape the types of energy-intensive industries they can attract: some regions are best placed to produce very energy-intensive commodities (like green steel and green ammonia), while other regions are best positioned to host more complex industries that still require good clean energy supplies (like battery manufacturing or datacentres). Similarly, some powershoring industries have many spillovers and open up new pathways for regional economic growth, while other energy-intensive industries have fewer spillovers or open up fewer development pathways. This contribution explores these trends to help policymakers develop contextually aware powershoring strategies that can catalyse their best opportunities for economic development.

  • Book Chapter

    Ahuja, K. & Hausmann, R., 2025

    Industrial policy for competitiveness in the energy transition

    Green intersections: the global embedding of climate change in policy, 53-74.

    Green objectives have reshaped public policy worldwide since the signing in 2015 of the Paris Agreement to limit global warming. Climate policy has moved from being one policy among many […]

    Green objectives have reshaped public policy worldwide since the signing in 2015 of the Paris Agreement to limit global warming. Climate policy has moved from being one policy among many to an objective embedded in public policies at every level, including energy, industrial, fiscal, trade, development and foreign policies. However, a clear outcome from this policy shift is yet to be seen, with emissions still rising and climate impacts intensifying. There is also backlash against greening in a charged geopolitical environment.

    Nevertheless, the chapters in this volume, written by a range of experts worldwide, show that in many countries and policy areas, green objectives are still driving fundamental changes and many lessons have been learned. The goals of reducing emissions and enhancing economic and societal resilience to climate change will persist as climate impacts become more evident, and as the green transition produces successes at city, regional and national levels. In this context, this Bruegel Blueprint offers a fresh intellectual framework for understanding how the green transition is shaping cross-sectoral impacts across the globe.

  • Podcast

    Ricardo Hausmann on the rise of industrial policy, green growth, and Trump’s tariffs

    HKS PolicyCast

    For market purists, any mention of the term industrial policy used to evoke visions of heavy-handed Soviet-style central planning, or the stifling state-centric protectionism employed by Latin American countries in […]
  • Journal Articles

    Fortunato, A. & Santos, M.A., 2025

    Public-Private Dialogs to Spur Export-led Growth: The Case of Productivity Taskforces in Namibia

    Cambridge University Press: Elements in the Economics of Emerging Markets

    This case study examines the implementation of Namibia’s first Productivity Task Force focused on the high-value fruit sector from 2021 to 2024. Productivity task forces, modeled after Peru’s Mesas Ejecutivas, […]
    public_private_dialogs_cover.jpg

    This case study examines the implementation of Namibia’s first Productivity Task Force focused on the high-value fruit sector from 2021 to 2024. Productivity task forces, modeled after Peru’s Mesas Ejecutivas, facilitate public-private dialogues to resolve sector-specific productivity issues. The Namibian Investment Promotion and Development Board, the Ministry of Agriculture, Water and Land Reform, and the Ministry of Finance led the Namibian task force. The study highlights critical stages, including the task force’s management and organization, political authorization, and the identification and resolution of productivity problems. While some challenges remain unsolved, the PTF has laid the groundwork for long-term improvements in government capacity, better public-public coordination, public-private collaboration, and a more business-friendly environment. The study offers valuable insights for implementing similar public-private initiatives in other developing countries. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.

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    Cambridge Elements are a new concept in academic publishing and scholarly communication, combining the best features of books and journals. They consist of original, concise, authoritative, and peer-reviewed scholarly and scientific research, organised into focused series edited by leading scholars, and provide comprehensive coverage of the key topics in disciplines spanning the arts and sciences.

    Regularly updated and conceived from the start for a digital environment, they provide a dynamic reference resource for graduate students, researchers, and practitioners.

  • Working Papers

    Chacua, C., et al., 2024

    Innovation Policies Under Economic Complexity

    Recent geopolitical challenges have revived the implementation of industrial and innovation policies. Ongoing discussions focus on supporting cutting-edge industries and strategic technologies but ignore the impact on economic growth. In this paper, researchers explain why effective innovation policies should be place-based and multidimensional, leveraging countries’ existing capabilities and addressing countries’ current problems.

    Recent geopolitical challenges have revived the implementation of industrial and innovation policies. Ongoing discussions focus on supporting cutting-edge industries and strategic technologies but hardly pay attention to their impact on economic growth. In light of this, we discuss the design of innovation policies to address current development challenges while considering the complex nature of productive activities. Our approach conceives economic development and technological progress as a process of accumulation and diversification of knowledge. This process is limited by the tacit nature of knowledge and by countries’ binding constraints to growth. Consequently, effective innovation policies should be place-based and multidimensional, leveraging countries’ existing capabilities and addressing countries’ current problems. This contrasts policies that lead to economic efficiencies, such as copying other countries’ solutions to problems that countries do not currently have.

  • Working Papers

    Daboin, J., et al., 2023

    Inputs for Policy Design: Tools of Economic Diversification in the UAE

    This report examines how the United Arab Emirates can leverage three key policy tools to accelerate economic diversification and transition to a knowledge-based economy: Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), Free Zones, […]
    Growth Lab

    This report examines how the United Arab Emirates can leverage three key policy tools to accelerate economic diversification and transition to a knowledge-based economy: Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), Free Zones, and Sovereign Wealth Funds (SWFs). While the UAE has successfully attracted substantial FDI inflows and diversified its export basket over the past two decades, the country continues to underperform in economic complexity and faces challenges attracting knowledge-intensive investments, particularly in research and development activities. The analysis reveals that Free Zones have evolved beyond regulatory arbitrage advantages to become mechanisms for public-private coordination and specialized public goods provision, though their contribution to broader knowledge spillovers remains limited by restrictions on mainland business interactions. Similarly, while the UAE’s SWFs have increasingly pursued domestic diversification objectives through strategic acquisitions and partnerships, their impact could be improved by better aligning foreign investments with domestic capabilities and leveraging multiple channels for knowledge transfer beyond firm relocation. The report recommends a quality-oriented approach to FDI attraction focusing on innovation and R&D activities, adaptive Free Zone management that responds to evolving firm needs, and strategic SWF investments guided by economic complexity metrics, emphasizing that successful diversification requires intensive public-private and public-public coordination across all three tools to provide the necessary inputs for new, complex activities to appear in the UAE’s economic and industrial landscape.

  • Book Chapter

    Hausmann, R. & Ahuja, K., 2023

    A more globally-minded European green industrial policy

    Sparking Europe’s New Industrial Revolution: A Policy for Net Zero, Growth and Resilience, 152.

    Industrial policy has for a long time raised difficult questions for policymakers to unpick. What justifications are there for government intervention in market mechanisms, and how and to what extent […]
    sparking_new_industrial_revolution_book_cover.png
    Industrial policy has for a long time raised difficult questions for policymakers to unpick. What justifications are there for government intervention in market mechanisms, and how and to what extent should governments intervene? What are the pros and cons of picking ‘winners’ for support? These questions have made a powerful return in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic and geopolitical uncertainty, and because of the pressing need to move to net-zero emission economies. In addition, the European Union is reviving its industrial policy in the context of support given to companies in the United States under the US Inflation Reduction Act. This volume, produced with financial support from the European Climate Foundation, assesses what must be done to implement industrial policy in a way that will achieve overarching goals while minimising distortions.
  • Growth Lab

    News

    news

    Why Industrial Policy Is Back

    January 26, 2023

    Ricardo Hausmann for Project Syndicate In this Op-Ed, Ricardo Hausmann argues that Industrial policies are not about picking winners, but about trying to ensure that the supply of all public […]
  • Working Papers

    Fortunato, A., 2022

    Getting Back on the Curve: South Africa’s Manufacturing Challenge

    The report aims to inform the government’s strategic approach towards manufacturing by analyzing the potential and limits for job creation within the sector. To meet that goal, we analyze the […]
    Growth Lab

    The report aims to inform the government’s strategic approach towards manufacturing by analyzing the potential and limits for job creation within the sector. To meet that goal, we analyze the sector’s main features and recent trajectory through the lens of global deindustrialization and South Africa’s particular industrial dynamics. Secondly, we provide evidence of how, when, and why South Africa has deviated from the global deindustrialization trends. Lastly, we provide a policy framework to address the bottlenecks that are preventing South Africa from getting back on a better track of industrial performance.

    Related project: Accelerating Growth Through Inclusion in South Africa