|
Showing 1 - 1 of
1 matches in All Departments
Today, Europe is facing a political crisis because it has not
solved a double dilemma. The first one is institutional and
concerns the frontiers of the Union and thus the number of
potential regions. The second one is economic, and makes it
necessary to choose between, on the one hand, the need to
strengthen the European growth poles (especially the metropolitan
regions) in order to compete successfully with the Triad and the
Asiatic countries and, on the other, the obligation to ensure
???harmonious development??? and to distribute the structural funds
more evenly or even to concentrate them in the Eastern countries
and the less favoured regions characterized by atonic growth. In
other words, the choice facing the European Commission reflects the
crucial dilemma between size and integration and between equity and
growth. In terms of territorial prospective and management, four
main scenarios must be compared and their impacts must be
estimated: the strengthening of concentration, the diffused
metropolization, the increase of regional inequalities and the
polycentrism.
This is the main reason why the question of European regional
convergence is now attracting considerable attention, since
polarization phenomena and specific regional trajectories are
challenging the hypothesis of automatic catch-up within the
European Union over nearly two decades. This interest is further
compounded by the huge challenge of integrating the ten new Eastern
countries, two other candidates in 2007 (Bulgaria and Romania) and
probably several other ones in the near future (especially Croatia,
but also Moldavia and Ukraine and, perhaps, Turkey). For regional
policy-makers, the main concern is to makemonetary integration
successful, to moderate the divergent forces and to stimulate the
lagging territories.
This study of spatial convergence is very interesting, because it
combines theoretical openness, access to recent statistical
databases (REGIO) and the use of mathematical applications (Markov
chains, Generalized Moments method), together with the possibility
of conducting empirical tests leading to a new analysis of
decentralization policies and to the characterization of new growth
factors and new locational strategies.
All these methods are used to analyze the empirical reality of the
European convergence process, for Western European countries and
Eastern ones successively. A final chapter on the regional dynamics
in Ukraine and Russia is also added. The results show a strong
diversity of regional evolutions at an aggregate level and specific
spatial dynamics at a sectoral level. The role of agglomeration
economies (density, regional capitals) and spatial externalities
(diffusive growth), especially through autocorrelation tests and
fixed effects analysis, as well as the importance of regional
specialization and of metropolarization are confirmed. To sum up,
the main finding of this book is the coexistence of national
convergence and regional divergence for the Western countries and
the converse for the Eastern ones. All these empirical results shed
light on the relevance of new economic geography, the need to
distinguish spatial and institutional hierarchies and give some
appropriate strategies to policymakers.
The questions of the quality of the integration and the prospect of
further enlargement of the European Union to the East (up to the
Urals frontier?)highlighted by these empirical findings demand
ingenious political management in order to reconcile regional
diversity (and especially the fact that a moderate level of
inequalities could stimulate global growth) and the European
project itself (not only the economic aspects but also the
political and cultural aspects).
To conclude, the main question is whether the European Union has
the means to play on different fields (geographic size, cultural
mix and above all distribution of structural funds) without
threatening its long-term growth and diluting its economic culture
(and its ???social cohesion???) in the face of globalization.
|
|