“…Geographers have long argued that "the state really does matter" under economic globalisation (Dicken, 2011(Dicken, , also 1994 and that transnational capital does not operate in a borderless world (Yeung, 1998a). A number of contributions to international political economy have also demonstrated that the state is of continued relevance in development policy intervention under globalisation (e.g., Carmody, Hampwaye, & Sakala, 2012;Mosley, 2005;Weiss, 2005), including through industrial policy (Gereffi & Sturgeon, 2013;Lauridsen, 2010;Wade, 2010). Yet, it is only more recently that the bridging of insights on the role of the state from literatures in economic development and industrial policy, and in GVCs and GPNs, has begun to gather pace (e.g., Bhatia, 2013;Gereffi & Sturgeon, 2013;Kaplinsky & Morris, 2016).…”