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楼主 |
发表于 2007-11-16 12:02:36
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ut well above any other large area of the world
• However, wealth is and has been unevenly distributed across the EU:
– Until recently a core/periphery was visible
– The core: Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Sweden, the UK, and Northern Italy
– The periphery: Greece, Ireland, Portugal, Spain, and Southern Italy
National disparities in the EU (II)
• Recent changes have led to a blurring of the distinction between core and periphery:
– Poor economic performance of some of the countries of the core (Finland, Sweden and the UK)
– High growth in the periphery (Ireland)
National disparities in GDP per capita and unemployment
Regional disparities in the EU
• Strong national contrasts hide even greater regional contrasts:
– In 1998, the GDP per capita of Luxembourg was 3.8 times greater than that of Portugal
– Hamburg’s GDP was 6.7 times higher than that of Ipeiros (Greece)
– Andalusia and Extremadura had unemployment rates of 32.4 and 30.2%, whereas Salzburg or Belluno had a mere 2.2 and 2.3% respectively.
• Internal economic disparities are evident in almost every single country in the EU
– Italy (GDP Lombardy 132.5 .... Calabria 59.2) (Unemployment Trentino 3.8% .... Campania 25%)
Regional disparities in the EU (II)
• Strong regional contrasts also in:
– Portugal (LiS*on and the North vs. the South and Centre)
– France (Paris vs. the rest) --Spain (Northeast and Madrid vs. South and West)
– UK (South vs. North)--Germany (South vs. North)--Sweden (South vs. North)--Belgium (North vs. South)
• No regional contrasts in:
– The Netherlands
Factors behind the existence of territorial disparities
• Factor endowment:
– Inherited economic situation: GDP per capita
– Quality and quantity of human capital: Skilled labour, matching skills with labour demands
– Accessibility: Infrastructure endowment
– Innovation: Generation and assimilation of innovation. Investment in R&D
– Sectoral structure
The need for intervention
• Do territorial differences in factor endowment justify the implementation of European development policies?
• Is a development policy really necessary?
The economic debate
• Endogenous growth theory and new economic geography:
– Greater accessibility, higher skills, and greater capacity to generate and assimilate innovation will lead to the concentration of economic activity
– A development policy is needed in order to counterbalance this tendency
• Classical Ricardian trade theory:
– Factor endowment is less important
– Integration leads to a rearrangement of ec |
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