The new long telegram
Industrial policy returns to the West — not as ideology, but as plumbing.
For thirty years, the operating assumption of the post-Cold-War economic order was that markets would deliver cheap inputs in perpetuity, and that geopolitics could be quietly subcontracted to Washington. That assumption is, finally, being retired — not by speechwriters, but by procurement officers.
Three independent threads converged this quarter. The European Critical Raw Materials Act passed its second-stage review with the targets raised, not softened. Japan's METI green-lit an extension of the Rapidus subsidy past 2030. And the United States, six months after the most recent round of export controls, has begun quietly attaching strings to the CHIPS disbursements that go far beyond fabs.
Industrial policy didn't return because anyone won an argument. It returned because the supply chains stopped working.
What this means for the next eighteen months, in three claims and one chart…