Gács, János (2002): Structural Change and Catching Up: Experience of the Ten Candidate Countries. Published in: IIASA Interim Report No. IR-02-031/April (April 2002): pp. 1-32.
Preview |
PDF
IR-02-031.pdf Download (222kB) | Preview |
Abstract
The paper analyzes the experience of the Central and East European candidate countries with respect to major macro-level changes in the structure of their economy relevant for their catching up. More precisely, the production and utilization sides of the GDP, as well as the structure of manufacturing industry are focused on. The most important development on the production side of the GDP has been the substantial reduction of previously over-developed industrial activities on the one hand, and the emancipation of service activities, on the other. In the past 11 years the candidate countries caught up with countries at the same per capita level of GDP in terms of service intensity. Expanding market services have played a crucial role filling the void after central planning was abandoned, since efficient market coordination, the working of the “invisible hand” could not have developed without them. Relevant inputoutput coefficients show some evidence that the impact of services is deepening, this sector is contributing to and determining the production of value added at more stages of the production process than before. Restructuring within manufacturing shows a wide variation across the candidate countries. Good performance in the phase of recovery of output was not necessarily associated with large structural shifts. The dominance of labor intensive products in manufacturing, however, indicate that productivity catching up will necessitate further massive shifts across the sub-sectors in most of the candidate countries. Even if the large share of “screwdriver operations” in the framework of multinational networks may blur the picture of manufacturing structures, we can identify that the countries that attracted the largest part of FDI managed either to achieve great structural shifts in their industry, or to develop sub-sectors with potentially high unit values, or both. On the utilization side of the GDP substantial fluctuations took place. The expectations, however, that following stabilization and recovery high domestic savings rates and relatively high domestic investment ratios would support the evolving real convergence process, have been realized only in a few country. Moreover, in some of these economies sizable proportion of the domestic savings was wasted. This mixed development emphasizes the importance of utilizing foreign savings, particularly in the form of direct investment. The programmed progress of the EU accession process is crucial both for increasing the potential volume of foreign savings and to achieve that the efficiency gains that were dominating the period of recovery in 1995-1999 continue to accompany the accumulation of physical capital.
Item Type: | MPRA Paper |
---|---|
Original Title: | Structural Change and Catching Up: Experience of the Ten Candidate Countries |
Language: | English |
Keywords: | transition economies, catching up, structural change, emancipation of services |
Subjects: | F - International Economics > F2 - International Factor Movements and International Business > F21 - International Investment ; Long-Term Capital Movements L - Industrial Organization > L1 - Market Structure, Firm Strategy, and Market Performance > L16 - Industrial Organization and Macroeconomics: Industrial Structure and Structural Change ; Industrial Price Indices O - Economic Development, Innovation, Technological Change, and Growth > O1 - Economic Development > O14 - Industrialization ; Manufacturing and Service Industries ; Choice of Technology P - Economic Systems > P3 - Socialist Institutions and Their Transitions > P33 - International Trade, Finance, Investment, Relations, and Aid |
Item ID: | 60339 |
Depositing User: | Janos Gacs |
Date Deposited: | 02 Dec 2014 02:05 |
Last Modified: | 27 Sep 2019 07:49 |
References: | Árvay, J. (1995) The impact of national accounting systems on growth rates, in: Holzmann, R., Gács, J. and Winckler, G. (Eds.) Output Decline in Eastern Europe: Unavoidable, External Influence or Homemade? Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers Benácek, V. (2001) Generic Private Sector in an Economy of Transition: Developments and Impacts on the Czech Economy, IIASA Interim Report IR-01-046,International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, Laxenburg Burda, M. and Wyplosz, Ch. (1997) Macroeconomics: a European text, Oxford: Oxford University Press CESTAT Statistical Bulletin, 2001, No. 1, Budapest Charemza, W. and Davis, Ch. (1989) Models of Disequilibrium and Shortage in Centrally Planned Economies, London: Chapman Hall Clark, C. (1940) The conditions of Economic Progress, London: Macmillan CSO (2000) Statistical Yearbook of the Czech Republic 2000, Prague: Czech Statistical Office Darvas, Zs. and Simon, A. (2000) Capital Stock and Economic Development in Hungary, Economics of Transition, March 2000 Denizer C. and Wolf H. C. (1998) Aggregate Savings in the Transition, Paper prepared for the World Bank project “Saving Across the World” Dobrinsky, R. (2001) Convergence in Per Capita Income Levels, Productivity Dynamics and Real Exchange Rates in the Candidate Countries on the Way to EU Accession, IIASA Interim Report IR-01-038, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, Laxenburg European Commission (1999) The Competitiveness of European Industry, DG Enterprise, Luxembourg: Eur.-Op. Gács, J. (1989) Changes in the Structure of Production and Foreign Trade of the Hungarian Industry in the Period of Restrictions (1987-1986), Acta Oeconomica Vol. 40. No. 1-2 Gács, J. (1994) Output Decline and the Demise of the CMEA and the USSR: the Case of Hungary, Empirica Vol. 21, No. 1, (1994) Gács, J. (2001) Catching Up, Accession and Human Development, Paper presented at the IIASA workshop “Catching Up and EU Accession” in Stockholm, May 2001, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA), Laxenburg GUS (2000) Polski rocznik statystyczny 2000, Warsaw: Glowny Urzad Statystyczny Havlik, P. (2001) Sectoral Patterns of Catching-Up in Candidate Countries’ Manufacturing Industry, Paper presented at the IIASA workshop “Catching Up and EU Accession”, Stockholm May 4-6, 2001 30 Havlik, P. Landesmann, M. and Stehrer, R. (2001) Competitiveness of CEEC Industries: Evidence from Foreign Trade Specialization and Quality Indicators, WIIW Research Report No. 278, The Vienna Institute for International Economic Studies (WIIW), July 2001 Kornai J. (1992) The Socialist System: The Political Economy of Communism, Princeton: Princeton University Press Landesmann, M. (2000a) Structural Change in the Transition Economies, 1989-1999, Economic Survey of Europe, 2000. No. 2-3. UN-ECE Geneva Landesmann M. (Ed.) (2000b) Structural Developments in Central and Eastern Europe, WIIW Structural Report, Vienna: The Vienna Institute for International Economic Studies Loayza, N., López, H., Schmidt-Hebbel, Kl. and Servén, L. (1998a) Saving in the World: Stylized Facts, paper prepared in the framework of the World Bank Research Project "Saving Across the World" September 1998 Loayza, N., Schmidt-Hebbel, K. and Servén, L. (1998b) What Drives Saving Across the World? paper prepared in the framework of the World Bank Research Project "Saving Across the World", September 1998 OECD (2000) Structural Statistics for Industry and Services, OECD, Paris Pelkmans, J., Gros, D. and N. Ferrer (2000) Long-run Economic Aspects of the European Union’s Eastern Enlargement, WRR Scientific Council for the Government Policy, Working Document W 109, The Hague Peneder, M. (2001) Entrepreneurial Competition and Industrial Location, Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, UK Rask, K. J. and Rask, K. N. (1994) The Pivotal Role of Services in Transitional Economies: Lessons from the West, Economics of Transition, Volume 2. No. 4. Rodrik, D. (1998) Saving Transitions; paper prepared in the framework of the World Bank Research Project "Saving Across the World", July 1998 Rosati, D. (2001) Financial Convergence and Catching Up, IIASA Interim Report (forthcoming), International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, Laxenburg Sachs, J. D. and Warner, A. M. (1996) Achieving Rapid Growth in the Transition Economies of Central Europe, HIID Development Discussion Paper No. 544, Harvard Institute for International Development UN ECE (2001) Domestic Savings in the Transition Economies, Economic Survey of Europe, 2001. No. 1. Geneva: UN Economic Commission of Europe Vidovic, H. (2000) Structural Change in CEEC Labor Markets, in: Landesmann M. (Ed.) (2000b) WDI (2001) World Development Indicators, CD-Rom, The World Bank. |
URI: | https://mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/id/eprint/60339 |