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Developing Efficient Activation Approaches and Identifying Elements for Regional Cooperation in the Western Balkans (by Vladimir Gligorov, Renate Haupfleisch, Mario Holzner, Katja Korolkova, Monika Natter and Hermine Vidovic) wiiw Research Report No. 374, October 2011 197 pages including 33 Tables and 20 Figures DETAILS & BUY FREE DOWNLOAD The main objectives of this study are the assessment of activation policies in the Western Balkan countries in the light of the EU policy frameworks and the capacity and effectiveness of the Public Employment Services (PES) to implement modern labour market services. The general strategy of the research is to examine the existing activation policies against the background of labour market developments in the Western Balkan countries. In a further step the study identifies opportunities for regional cooperation among the individual countries of the region. ...more |
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Fiscal Issues in Financial Crisis (by Vladimir Gligorov) wiiw Research Report No. 373, September 2011 31 pages including 11 Figures DETAILS & BUY Fiscal constraint is potentially lax in catching-up economies, but it has not been abused by most countries considered in this paper. Fiscal risks are significant currently, but sustainability and structural balances are not threatened as a rule, if the return to potential growth rates is to be achieved in the medium run. The risks to countercyclical public financing could be discouraged by a comprehensive EU stabilization policy of some sort. Early euro adoption, absent credible stabilization policy, is not the first best policy option for fiscal policy targets....more |
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Revival of the Visegrad Countries’ Mutual Trade after their EU Accession: a Search for Explanation (by Neil Foster, Gabor Hunya, Olga Pindyuk and Sandor Richter) wiiw Research Report No. 372, July 2011 50 pages including 15 Tables and 23 Figures DETAILS & BUY After the Visegrad countries’ accession to the EU in 2004, one of the most remarkable developments was the sudden upturn in their mutual trade. In 2007 the value of aggregate intra-Visegrad trade was two and a half times higher than in 2003. The rate of growth in these countries’ trade with the EU 15 (the ‘old’ member states) was only half as much. Also, individual Visegrad countries showed higher export growth rates to other Visegrad members in the post-accession period than in the years before EU accession. These developments are reflected in the changes in the geographical distribution of t...more |
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Assessment of the Labour Market in Serbia (by Vladimir Gligorov, Kosovka Ognjenović and Hermine Vidovic) wiiw Research Report No. 371, May 2011 97 pages including 45 Tables and 11 Figures DETAILS & BUY FREE DOWNLOAD In the period after the political changes in the year 2000, GDP growth in Serbia was rather rapid and compares favourably with other transition countries in Southeastern Europe. It was driven mainly by the expansion of services, with industrial production and agriculture basically stagnating over the whole period. The labour market effects were similar to those in other countries going through transition: employment declined in the public sector and increased in the private sector, with the overall number of employed declining and those unemployed increasing, and also with strong increases in the number of pensioners....more |
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Western Balkans: Employment in the Gas and Electricity Sectors (by Vasily Astrov, Edward Christie, Doris Hanzl-Weiss, Mario Holzner, Sebastian Leitner, Waltraut Urban and Hermine Vidovic) wiiw Research Report No. 370, March 2011 150 pages including 24 Tables and 27 Figures DETAILS & BUY FREE DOWNLOAD The objective of this study is to analyse employment developments in the gas and electricity sectors in seven Western Balkan Contracting Parties of the Energy Community. These are Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia and Kosovo under UNSCR 1244/99. In addition, the impact of the liberalization of the respective markets is examined (quantitatively and qualitatively) and the most likely trends for the future development are identified....more |
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Trade in Intermediate Products and EU Manufacturing Supply Chains (by Jyrki Ali-Yrkkö, Neil Foster, Doris Hanzl-Weiss, Petri Rouvinen, Timo Seppälä, Robert Stehrer, Roman Stöllinger and Pekka Ylä-Anttila) wiiw Research Report No. 369, February 2011 174 pages including 57 Tables and 69 Figures DETAILS & BUY FREE DOWNLOAD Where is your mobile coming from? This simple question is not easy to answer as the mobile has been assembled using components from different countries (including the domestic) and by using services from the domestic and foreign economies. This multi-country nature of products is not only a feature of more complex high-tech products (such as mobile phones, cars, etc.) but in almost all cases a product is not made up entirely of components or inputs from the country where it is finally assembled or sold. At least some of the components and services (e.g. transport services) necessary to bring t...more |
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An Assessment of the Access by Romanian SMEs to Structural Funds (by Gabor Hunya) wiiw Research Report No. 368, January 2011 36 pages including 7 Tables and 9 Figures DETAILS & BUY FREE DOWNLOAD Romanian SMEs can directly benefit from the Sectoral Operational Programme ‘Increase of Economic Competitiveness’ (SOP IEC) and some parts of the Regional Operational Programme (ROP) in the period 2007 2013. Research commissioned by the Directorate General for Regional Policy of the European Commission made a strategic evaluation of SMEs’ experience with these support programmes and their needs for support in general. This paper is the summary of the final report of the project carried out in the first half of 2010. In the context of the research underlying this paper, a standardized sur...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 |
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The Role of Services in the New Member States: A Comparative Analysis Based on Input-Output Tables (by Doris Hanzl-Weiss and Robert Stehrer) wiiw Research Report No. 366, November 2010 91 pages including 26 Tables and 37 Figures DETAILS & BUY Using input-output analysis, this research project investigates the role of services in the Central European new EU member states (NMS) – the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, the Slovak Republic and Slovenia – and compares it to that in Austria. The role of services includes not only their position in the production structure per se but also their increasing importance as an intermediate input for manufacturing and other services. As services were underdeveloped under the former system in the new EU member states, it is interesting to look at their features and changes over time. The analysis ...more |
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Migration, Skills and Productivity (by Robert Hierländer, Peter Huber, Anna Iara, Michael Landesmann, Klaus Nowotny, Mary O'Mahony, Fei Peng, Catherine Robinson and Robert Stehrer) wiiw Research Report No. 365, November 2010 172 pages including 81 Tables and 20 Figures DETAILS & BUY FREE DOWNLOAD The literature on international migration has repeatedly emphasized that the extent and structure of migration has an important impact on the competitiveness of regions and countries. This report provides an overview of the extent and the potential effects of high-skill migration to the EU27. It shows how many high-skilled migrants live in the EU, where these migrants come from, and how the European Union is positioned in the international competition for talent. Second, we examine how high-skilled migrants fare in European labour markets. Finally we address the issue of the effects of high-sk...more |