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European Neighbourhood - Challenges and Opportunities for EU Competitiveness (by Vasily Astrov, Peter Havlik, Mario Holzner, Gabor Hunya, Isilda Mara, Sandor Richter, Roman Stöllinger and Hermine Vidovic) wiiw Research Report No. 382, September 2012 154 pages including 24 Tables and 61 Figures DETAILS & BUY FREE DOWNLOAD (Report based on Background Study for European Competitiveness Report 2012, see http://ec.europa.eu/enterprise/policies/industrial-competitiveness/competitiveness-analysis/european-competitiveness-report/index_en.htm) Summary Countries belonging to the European neighbourhood are highly diverse. Their diversity is multidimensional (geographical, socio-economic, political, cultural, religious, etc.) and the individual dimensions all have important implications for EU policies towards the region(s), for EU institutional relations with individual neighbourhood countries and for these countri...more |
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Transition in the MENA Region: Challenges, Opportunities and Prospects (by Vladimir Gligorov, Peter Havlik, Sandor Richter and Hermine Vidovic) wiiw Research Report No. 376, January 2012 68 pages including 16 Tables and 10 Figures DETAILS & BUY This paper discusses the transition agenda and provides the key economic characteristics of selected Middle East and North Africa countries (MENA) in comparison with selected Central, East and Southeast European countries (CESEE). We intend to identify some regularities in transition processes and to draw policy lessons for MENA countries. Among the key challenges facing the MENA region are job creation, fighting corruption, public sector reforms and trade diversification; the way towards a functioning market economy should not necessarily be as long and controversial as in the CESEE. MENA cou...more |
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EU Gas Supplies Security: Russian and EU Perspectives, the Role of the Caspian, the Middle East and the Maghreb Countries (by Gerhard Mangott) wiiw Research Report No. 367, December 2010 68 pages including 5 Tables, 9 Figures and 21 Maps DETAILS & BUY This report tracks the major geo-economic and geo-strategic ruptures between the EU and Russia on the future patterns of gas supplies and shipping routes to the EU and the Western Balkans. It identifies the objectives and interests of the actors involved in this struggle: Russia, the EU, various EU members, the countries of the Caspian Basin (Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Azerbaijan) and the Middle East (Iran, Iraq, Qatar, Egypt) as well as the Maghreb countries (Algeria, Libya). It analyses in great detail the colliding interests of all actors at the intersection of business and (...more |