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Boardroom Statecraft
Ross Hill and Dr Treston Wheat
18 episodes
5 days ago
Welcome to Boardroom Statecraft—the podcast that helps business leaders understand and respond to the strategic realities of geopolitics.
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Politics
News
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All content for Boardroom Statecraft is the property of Ross Hill and Dr Treston Wheat and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Welcome to Boardroom Statecraft—the podcast that helps business leaders understand and respond to the strategic realities of geopolitics.
Show more...
Politics
News
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Ep 16. Industrial Policy and Geoeconomics
Boardroom Statecraft
34 minutes 36 seconds
2 weeks ago
Ep 16. Industrial Policy and Geoeconomics

In this episode, we continue our series on the Top 10 Geopolitical Risks for Businesses in 2026, turning to Risk #3 — Industrial Policy and Geoeconomics. We examine how governments are abandoning decades of free-market orthodoxy in favour of state-led industrial strategies designed to protect national interests, secure supply chains, and reassert economic sovereignty.


The discussion explores:

  • How industrial policy has re-emerged as the economic extension of great-power competition and techno-nationalism.
  • The evolution from neoliberalism to interventionism, tracing roots from Alexander Hamilton to the CHIPS Act and beyond.
  • How national security framing justifies tariffs, subsidies, and state involvement across sectors once considered purely commercial.
  • The semiconductor industry as a case study—why it set the template for deeper state-corporate integration.
  • The tension between what is good for a corporation and what is good for a country, illustrated through U.S.–China technology policy.
  • Winners and losers: how energy, hydrocarbons, and certain emerging markets like Vietnam and Mexico could benefit, while agriculture and innovation face headwinds.
  • Why protectionism may be more destabilising than industrial policy itself.
  • The rise of a “Hamiltonian capitalism”—a new model where prosperity and security are increasingly fused.


Key Takeaway

The liberal economic order is giving way to a Hamiltonian era of strategic capitalism. For corporations, success will depend not just on market performance but on political alignment, negotiation, and an ability to operate within government-defined priorities.

Boardroom Statecraft
Welcome to Boardroom Statecraft—the podcast that helps business leaders understand and respond to the strategic realities of geopolitics.