987 resultados para Industrial Policy


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The rules governing the trade of goods in global markets have shifted toward non-tariff measures related to environmental and chemical safety. Unlike traditional environmental/safety requirements, the scope of modern regulations covers products’ environmental performance and chemical safety. To comply with these modern regulations, production practices along the entire supply chain must be realigned to manage certain chemical substances incorporated into the final product. This paper examines the implications of product-related environmental and chemical safety regulations on different firms operating in Thailand.

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For manufacturing firms in developing countries, there are high barriers to entry and to catching up with competitors in their global production networks (GPNs). This paper examines the case of a Mexican auto-parts manufacturer that succeeded in catching up in the automotive GPN. The author proposes that the door to GPNs is open thanks to frequent changes in the boundaries of firms, and also stresses the importance of the necessary conditions that generate opportunities, including institutional settings that facilitate market entry and catching up, and capability building by firms hopeful of entry.

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La ricerca punta a ricostruire il complesso e travagliato processo decisionale che porta alla realizzazione del quarto centro siderurgico di Taranto. Il grande stabilimento viene progettato nel 1955, approda sui tavoli del comitato di Presidenza della Finsider nel settembre del 1956 e dopo quasi quattro anni di dibattiti e dietrofront ottiene il via libera dal consiglio dei Ministri il 9 giugno del 1959. La prima pietra del centro verrà posta il 10 luglio del 1960, il primo settore (un tubificio) inaugurato nel 1961, mentre il resto del complesso entrerà in funzione nel 1964. Ispiratore del centro è Pasquale Saraceno e gli uomini dell'associazione Svimez, convinti sostenitori dell'industrializzazione dell'Italia Meridionale. Il progetto sostenuto apertamente dalla Democrazia Cristiana a partire dal 1956 e in seguito da tutte le forze politiche, viene convintamente osteggiato dall'Impresa Pubblica, Finsider in testa, che vede messa a repentaglio l'autonomia imprenditoriale del gruppo e i propri equilibri economici. Il centro meridionale è considerato strategicamente penalizzante ed economicamente sconveniente, dato che i maggiori centri industriali italiani del tempo si trovano nell'Italia Settentrionale (quindi una localizzazione meridionale comporterebbe un aggravio di costi per le operazioni di trasporto dell'acciaio). L'Impresa pubblica opterebbe su una politica imprenditoriale più prudente, incentrata sul potenziamento graduale dei centri già esistenti. Non così la Politica decisa ad attuare una svolta in grado di realizzare evidenti progressi nell'economia meridionale. La nostra ricerca ha cercato di ricostruire l'impegno e le manovre dei principali partiti politici e parallelamente le strategie e le ragioni dell'Impresa pubblica tenendo anche conto del grande dibattito sorto sulla stampa nazionale tra favorevoli e contrari al progetto e al coinvolgimento dell'opinione pubblica meridionale in particolare pugliese. La ricerca si divide in tre parti (dedicate alle origini del progetto (1954-1955), gli sviluppi della vicenda (1957-1958), il via libera al centro (1959-1960) e si articola in sei capitoli (Meridione e industrializzazione: verso il quarto centro siderurgico; La siderurgia italiana verso il boom: il progetto del IV centro a ciclo integrale; La polemica Iri – Dc: uno scontro istituzionale; Il Pci e il centro siderurgico di Taranto; La vicenda Vado Ligure e la posizione dell'impresa privata; L'approvazione del progetto). La tesi cerca di mettere a fuoco la posizione della Politica (Dc e Pci su tutti), della Tecnica (Iri e Finsider ma anche progetti e impegno dei privati, quali la Fiat e la Falck) e della società civile (soprattutto quella tarantina dedicando una certa attenzione al mondo cattolico). La ricerca si è svolta su più livelli. Nel primo anno si è compiuta un'approfondito studio presso l'archivio dell'Iri (conservato presso l'Archivio Centrale dello Stato a Roma), della Dc (Istituto Sturzo, Roma), del Pci (Istituto Gramsci Roma). Il secondo ha permesso di soffermarsi sulle vicende di Taranto (Archivio dell'Arcidiocesi, Archivio del Comune, Biblioteca Comunale). Il terzo è stato focalizzato ancora su vicende politiche e finanziarie (Archivio Storico Banca d'Italia, Archivio Giulio Andreotti, Archivio storico del Senato, tutti con sede a Roma). L'esame dei verbali dei Comitati esecutivi della Finsider per gli anni 1954 -1959 rivela una chiara direzione: la Finsider studia con grande rigore la situazione del mercato italiano, delle varie aziende e dei centri produttivi del Gruppo. Un rigore finalizzato alla chiusura dei centri ritenuti antiquati e poco funzionali e al potenziamento di quelli più moderni e dalle dimensioni imponenti. Un'azione tesa ad incrementare la produzione, essere competitivi sul mercato internazionale e salvaguardare il vero faro dell'azienda in quegli anni: l'economicità. Cioè ottenere il più possibile tutelando gli equilibri finanziari del Gruppo. E' per questo che per ben due anni, i funzionari dell'azienda avanzano progetti complementari, come quello del piccolo centro di Apuania, ma il Comitato esecutivo pur considerando l'investimento indispensabile e conveniente, decide di rinviarne la realizzazione. Gli elementi più rilevanti sono emersi per l'anno 1957. E' noto come il centro siderurgico meridionale fosse messo a rischio da un altro progetto avanzato dalla Fiat, decisa a realizzare un proprio stabilimento nell'Italia settentrionale, a Vado Ligure. Il centro avrebbe dovuto rifornire di acciaio gli stabilimenti della casa automobilistica rendendola indipendente dall'Industria di Stato. Nel caso si fosse realizzato il centro di Vado (al quale la Fiat rinuncerà nel 1957) sarebbe risultato impossibile realizzarne un altro nel Meridione (a quel punto la produzione avrebbe superato i consumi). Dai dati esaminati emerge una trattativa finora inedita che vede il coinvolgimento della Finsider e di privati stranieri.

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Esse trabalho teve como objetivo contribuir para o debate sobre a importância das políticas de incentivo à inovação no Brasil. Os resultados esperados do uso que as empresas fizeram dos diferentes tipos de instrumentos sobre os gastos em pesquisa e desenvolvimento (P&D) foram avaliados pelo método de diferenças em diferenças. O método permitiu obter as diferenças de gastos entre empresas beneficiárias de instrumentos e as não-beneficiárias em três períodos consecutivos: 2005 em relação à 2003; 2008 em relação à 2005 e de 2011 em relação à 2008. Ao fazer isso, foi possível identificar se tais diferenças foram positivas e significativas, podendo ser atribuídas às influências dos instrumentos. Os instrumentos utilizados foram: incentivos fiscais, Lei de Informática, financiamentos em parcerias, financiamentos sem parcerias e subvenção. E a utilização dos mesmos pelas empresas teve maior relevância no âmbito de diversos programas de apoio à inovação vigentes no país a partir da retomada das políticas industriais e tecnológicas, nos anos 2000. O estudo concluiu que os efeitos positivos e significativos são limitados à determinados grupos tecnológicos e à poucos instrumentos, em geral, de caráter fiscal. Além disso, esses efeitos positivos surgem em apenas um período, sendo que para cada grupo tecnológico foram efetuadas estimativas para três períodos. Também não houve evidências de que os instrumentos financeiros exerçam efeitos significativos sobre as decisões de gastos em pesquisa e desenvolvimento, apesar da maior ênfase dada aos mesmos no período estudado. Os resultados sugerem fraca influência dos mecanismos de apoio à P&D no Brasil sobre o aumento dos gastos privados, apesar dos avanços recentes.

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As part of the European Union’s commitment to deliver greater access to finance for small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), EU policy-makers will have to deal with a fragmented market landscape and responses by individual member states to address failures. On the basis of some early evidence, this Commentary calls for a rethinking on the part of the EU of its definition of an SME, which currently does not take into account the internal market dimension. A more accurate definition, reflecting the internal market and the stages of evolution of a firm and its financing needs, would allow better benchmarking and a comparison of policy responses that often claim to address market failures in SME finance.

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This report assesses the energy costs borne by the steel industry in the EU between 2010 and 2012, and compares the energy costs, including both the energy components and other regulatory costs, to production costs, turnover and margins of steel-makers. The estimates of energy costs are based on primary sources, i.e. is on information provided by steel-makers through a written questionnaire. This information was validated by the research team by checking annual energy bills, when available, and other public sources. In this respect, this exercise represents a unique fact-based investigation into the costs of energy for steel-makers in Europe, whereas most of the information currently available in the public domain is based on secondary or statistical information. In 2012, the median EU steel plant pays about €33/MWh for gas, up from €26/MWh in 2010. As for electricity, in 2012 the EU median plant pays €62/MWh, up from €59/MWh in 2010. The report also includes a comparison with the prices of energy carriers paid by producers based in the US.

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In May 2013, the European Commission received a mandate from the European Council to “to present an analysis of the composition and drivers of energy prices and costs in Member States, with a particular focus on the impact on households, SMEs and energy intensive industries, and looking more widely at the EU's competitiveness vis-à-vis its global economic counterparts”. Following such mandate and in view of the preparation by the Commission of a Communication and a Staff Working Document, DG Enterprise and Industry commissioned CEPS to carry out a set of studies aimed at providing well-grounded evidence about the evolution and composition of energy prices and costs at plant level within individual industry sectors. A team of CEPS researchers conducted the research, led by Christian Egenhofer and Lorna Schrefler. Vasileios Rizos served as Project Coordinator. Other CEPS researchers contributing to the project included: Fabio Genoese, Andrea Renda, Andrei Marcu, Julian Wieczorkiewicz, Susanna Roth, Federico Infelise, Giacomo Luchetta, Lorenzo Colantoni, Wijnand Stoefs, Jacopo Timini and Felice Simonelli. In addition to an introductory report entitled “About the Study and Cross-Sectoral Analysis”, CEPS prepared five sectoral case studies: two on ceramics (wall and floor tiles and bricks and roof tiles), two on chemicals (ammonia and chlorine) and one on flat glass. Each of these six studies has been consolidated in this single volume for free downloading on the CEPS website. The specific objective was to complement information already available at macro level with a bottom-up perspective on the operating conditions that industry stakeholders need to deal with, in terms of energy prices and costs. The approach chosen was based on case studies for a selected set (sub-)sectors amongst energy-intensive industries. A standard questionnaire was circulated and respondents were sampled according to specified criteria. Data and information collected were finally presented in a structured format in order to guarantee comparability of results between the different (sub-)sectors analysed. The complete set of files can also be downloaded from the European Commission’s website: http://ec.europa.eu/enterprise/newsroom/cf/itemdetail.cfm?item_id=7238&lang=en&title=Study-on-composition-and-drivers-of-energy-prices-and-costs-in-energy-intnsive-industries The results of the studies were presented at a CEPS Conference held on February 26th along with additional evidence from other similar studies. The presentations can be downloaded at: http://www.ceps.eu/event/level-and-drivers-eu-energy-prices-energy-inten...

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Industrial policy is back!’ This is the message given in the European Commission’s October 2012 communication on industrial policy (COM (2012) 582 final), which seeks to reverse the declining role of the manufacturing industry, and increase its share of European Union GDP from about 16 percent currently to above 20 percent. Historical evidence suggests that the goal is unlikely to be achieved. Manufacturing’s share of GDP has decreased around the world over the last 30 years. Paradoxically, this relative decline has been a reflection of manufacturing’s strength. Higher productivity growth in manufacturing than in the economy overall resulted in relative decline. A strategy to reverse this trend and move to an industrial share of above 20 percent might therefore risk undermining the original strength of industry – higher productivity growth. This Blueprint therefore takes a different approach. It starts by looking in depth into the manufacturing sector and how it is developing. It emphasises the extent to which European industry has become integrated with other parts of the economy, in particular with the increasingly specialised services sector, and how both sectors depend on each other. It convincingly argues that industrial activity is increasingly spread through global value chains. As a result, employment in the sector has increasingly become highly skilled, while those parts of production for which high skill levels are not needed have been shifted to regions with lower labour costs.

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This paper maps the initiatives to support access to finance for small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) that were available at national level in 2012 in the five biggest European economies (Germany, France, the UK, Italy and Spain). This mapping distinguishes initiatives promoted and financed primarily through public resources from those developed independently by the market. A second breakdown is proposed for those sources of finance with different targets, i.e. whether the target is debt financing (typically bank loans at favourable conditions, public guarantees on loans, etc.) or equity financing (typically venture capital funds, tax incentives on equity investments, etc.). A broad set of initiatives has been implemented to close the funding gap of SMEs in these five countries. The total amount of public spending for SMEs, however, has remained well below 1% of GDP. Public subsidisation of bank loans has been by far the most diffused type of intervention. Despite the fact that this strategy might prove to be effective in the short term, it fails to address long-term sustainability issues via a more diversified set of financing tools.

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For my undergraduate and graduate hospitality industry management courses, I planned to supplement frequent case study discussions and role plays with video-recorded insights from successful international and domestic hospitality managers. In these courses, numerous business topics are reviewed utilizing active learning approaches, with specific application to the hospitality industry.

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This study investigates whether trade-related, targeted, government policies had an impact on the total factor productivity (TFP) of manufacturing firms in Eastern Europe and Central Asia (ECA region) between 1995 and 2009. It does so by looking at how different types of primarily industry-specific trade policies (or their combinations) impacted firm productivity. The dependent variable is firm total factor productivity (TFP), calculated using the Levinsohn-Petrin approach. As an alternative measure of firm productivity, this study uses labor productivity. This study finds that, in most instances (10 out of 14 times), targeted policies do not show a significant impact on manufacturing firms’ TFP. Based on the analysis of 588 manufacturing firms in the ECA region, this study finds that, contrary to proponents of targeted policies, targeted trade-related government policies have a limited impact on the total factor productivity (TFP) in developing countries.

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The emergence of the controversial car service Uber has provoked a wide and heated discussion among economists specialising in the services sector in recent months. This Commentary explores the most salient questions being raised in the debate: Does Uber really offer a new service? And does it represent true innovation? The authors argue that there are some very interesting innovative elements associated with Uber, but those related to the specific industrial relations model might prove to be prejudiced against drivers.

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The ‘circular economy’ is gaining momentum as a concept in both academic and policy circles, and circular business models have been linked to significant economic benefits. This paper identifies barriers and enablers to adopting circular economy business practices, and presents key messages for policy-makers. It draws on input from a literature review, on discussions held in the context of the GreenEcoNet project and on an analysis of two SME circular business models.

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The pharmaceutical industry is one of the most competitive sectors in the European Union. With its substantial investments in research and development, this industry represents a key asset for the European economy and a major source of growth and employment. However, despite the importance of the pharmaceutical sector for the European Union, few researchers have attempted to assess the determinants of the EU exports of pharmaceuticals. This paper aims at filling the aforementioned gap by examining what drives EU exports of pharmaceuticals. In order to tackle this question, this paper has derived hypotheses from the Gravity Model of Trade and the relevant academic literature on pharmaceuticals. Based on an econometric analysis, the research sheds light on the complex interaction of factors influencing the EU exports of pharmaceuticals. The paper finds that the protection of intellectual property in the receiving countries, their economic size, the importance of their health sector, and the quality of infrastructures constitute major drivers to the EU exports of pharmaceuticals. On the contrary, the research shows that transports costs as well as tariff barriers and non-tariff barriers tend to hinder the EU exports of pharmaceuticals.

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As the European Commission’s antitrust investigation against Google approaches its final stages, its contours and likely outcome remain obscure and blurred by a plethora of nonantitrust-related arguments. At the same time, the initial focus on search neutrality as an antitrust principle seems to have been abandoned by the European Commission, in favour of a more standard allegation of ‘exclusionary abuse’, likely to generate anticompetitive foreclosure of Google’s rivals. This paper discusses search neutrality as an antitrust principle, and then comments on the current investigation based on publicly available information. The paper provides a critical assessment of the likely tests that will be used for the definition of the relevant product market, the criteria for the finding of dominance, the anticompetitive foreclosure test and the possible remedies that the European Commission might choose. Overall, and regardless of the outcome of the Google case, the paper argues that the current treatment of exclusionary abuses in Internet markets is in urgent need of a number of important clarifications, and has been in this condition for more than a decade. The hope is that the European Commission will resist the temptation to imbue the antitrust case with an emphasis and meaning that have nothing to do with antitrust (from industrial policy motives to privacy, copyright or media law arguments) and that, on the contrary, the Commission will devote its efforts to sharpening its understanding of dynamic competition in cyberspace, and the tools that should be applied in the analysis of these peculiar, fast-changing and often elusive settings.