Metropolregionen - Chancen der Raumentwicklung durch Polyzentralität und regionale Kooperation
Jörg Knieling, Stephanie Rahlf, Peter Franz, Tanja Frahm, Kerstin Hanebeck, Thorsten Wiechmann, Markus Egermann, Martin T. W. Rosenfeld
Werkstatt: Praxis Heft 54,
2007
Abstract
Vor dem Hintergrund von Globalisierung und Europäischer Integration gewinnt die Stärkung der Wettbewerbsfähigkeit von Städten und Regionen zunehmend an Bedeutung. Die Raumordnungspolitik hat in jüngster Zeit das Konzept der Metropolregionen entwickelt,um die Rolle großer Agglomerationen für die Raumentwicklung zu stärken. Bundesweit hat die MKRO elf Regionen als Metropolregionen anerkannt, im Osten Deutschlands sind es die Metropolregionen Berlin-Brandenburg sowie Halle/Leipzig-Sachsendreieck. Die Studie untersucht für diese beiden ostdeutschen Metropolregionen, welche Rolle sie für die Entwicklung der ostdeutschen Wirtschaft insgesamt spielen, wie ihre zukünftige Position im europäischen Kontext aussehen könnte, welche Vor- und Nachteile eine polyzentrisch organisierte Metropolregion hat sowie in welchen Bereichen die Kooperation zwischen den Städten verstärkt werden könnte. Im Ergebnis zeigt sich u. a., daß polyzentrisch organisierte Metropolregionen den Vorteil geringerer Ballungsnachteile als monozentrische Stadtregionen haben. Andererseits kommt es in polyzentrischen Metropolregionen zu einer ineffizienten Dopplung von Infrastruktureinrichtungen. Hinsichtlich der zukünftigen Kooperation speziell in der Metropolregion Halle/Leipzig-Sachsendreieck bieten sich zum einen die vergleichsweise konfliktarmen Bereiche Verkehr, TOurismus, Kultur sowie die gemeinsame Interessensvertretung auf europäischer und Bundesebene an. Längerfristig sollte aber auch an eine Kooperation in konfliktträchtigeren Handlungsfeldern gedacht werden, nicht zuletzt an den Bereich der Wirtschaftsförderung. Hierfür ist die Entwicklung geeigneter instutioneller Grundlagen eine wichtige Voraussetzung.
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Effects of European Competition Policy Reform for Central East Europe - an Institutional Perspective
Johannes Stephan, Jens Hölscher
Intellectual Economics,
No. 1,
2007
Abstract
With the Central and East European countries increasingly included into the international division of labour in the European Economic space, we are prompted to ask whether this integration operates on a level playing field with respect to competition policy. In fact, a comparison between the more advanced West European countries and countries in Central and East Europe reveals that effectiveness of implementation of competition law and policy and intensity of competition are lower in the East and in particular also in the new EU member countries of Central East Europe, where the institutional framework of the West had been taken over some years ago now. In this situation, the EU recently decided to reform competition policy by delegating some of its powers to national competition agencies. We discuss whether this reform will likely spur competition or whether this may turn out to be rather ill-designed for the particularities in post-socialist economies.
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Enhanced Cooperation in an Enlarged EU
Götz Zeddies, J. Ahrens, Renate Ohr
Jahrbuch für Wirtschaftswissenschaften,
No. 2,
2007
Abstract
The paper addresses the need for more flexibility in the integration process of the European Union after its recent eastward enlargement. The increasing number of decision-makers and the increasing heterogeneity of economic structures, financial constraints, societal preferences, and political interests impeded political decision making in the EU. In order to avoid a rank growth of integration and yet to strengthen the momentum of flexibility, so-called enhanced cooperation appears to be an appropriate instrument to be applied to the overall integration process. In this context the paper analyzes different possible developments of selected common policies in the EU if enhanced cooperation is practised by a sub-group of EU-members. Based on cluster analysis, similarities and distinctions among the EU members with respect to some specific policy realms are elaborated to identify clusters, or clubs, of countries which may apply the instrument of enhanced cooperation in the specific policy fields.
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The State of Convergence in SADC
Tobias Knedlik, F. Povel
Monitoring Regional Integration in Southern Africa Yearbook, Vol. 7,
No. 7,
2007
Abstract
The Southern African Development Community (SADC) Treaty established an integration agenda for the grouping culminating in the introduction of a common currency by 2018. By determining the degree of macroeconomic convergence across countries it becomes possible to draw conclusions with respect to the feasibility of the envisaged integration agenda of a regional integration scheme. In order to test for convergence among southern African countries the panel unit root test proposed by Im, Pesaran, and Shin (2003) is conducted. The results of the convergence analysis suggest that countries converge towards South Africa.
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Systematic Mispricing in European Equity Prices?
Marian Berneburg
IWH Discussion Papers,
No. 6,
2007
Abstract
One empirical argument that has been around for some time and that clearly contra- dicts equity market efficiency is that market prices seem too volatile to be optimal estimates of the present value of future discounted cash flows. Based on this, it is deduced that systematic pricing errors occur in equity markets which hence can not be efficient in the Effcient Market Hypothesis sense. The paper tries to show that this so-called excess volatility is to a large extend the result of the underlying assumptions, which are being employed to estimate the present value of cash flows. Using monthly data for three investment style indices from an integrated European Equity market, all usual assumptions are dropped. This is achieved by employing the Gordon Growth Model and using an estimation process for the dividend growth rate that was suggested by Barsky and De Long. In extension to Barsky and De Long, the discount rate is not assumed at some arbitrary level, but it is estimated from the data. In this manner, the empirical results do not rely on the prerequisites of sta- tionary dividends, constant dividend growth rates as well as non-variable discount rates. It is shown that indeed volatility declines considerably, but is not eliminated. Furthermore, it can be seen that the resulting discount factors for the three in- vestment style indices can not be considered equal, which, on a risk-adjusted basis, indicates performance differences in the investment strategies and hence stands in contradiction to an efficient market. Finally, the estimated discount rates under- went a plausibility check, by comparing their general movement to a market based interest rate. Besides the most recent data, the estimated discount rates match the movements of market interest rates fairly well.
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Repercusiones de la integración y consolidación de los sectores bancarios europeos sobre la innovación y las actividades de los emprendedores
Hans Degryse, Steven Ongena, Maria Fabiana Penas
Papeles de Economía Española,
No. 110,
2006
Abstract
We investigate whether the agenda of deepening the integration of the European financial sector may hurt innovation and growth in Europe. In particular we highlight the problems financial integration may create for breakthrough innovation. Financial integration, by escalating competition and consolidation in the European banking sector, may jeopardize the funding of radical innovators. However weighing the current evidence we conclude these problems may at most be transitory.
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Where enterprises lead, people follow? Links between migration and FDI in Germany
Claudia M. Buch, J. Kleinert, Farid Toubal
European Economic Review,
No. 8,
2006
Abstract
Standard neoclassical models of economic integration are based on the assumptions that capital and labor are substitutes and that the geography of factor market integration does not matter. Yet, these two assumptions are violated if agglomeration forces among factors from specific source countries are at work. Agglomeration implies that factors behave as complements and that the country of origin matters. This paper analyzes agglomeration between capital and labor empirically. We use state-level German data to answer the question whether and how migration and foreign direct investment (FDI) are linked. Stocks of inward FDI and of immigrants have similar determinants, and the geography of factor market integration matters. There are higher stocks of inward FDI in German states hosting a large foreign population from the same country of origin. This agglomeration effect is confined to higher-income source countries.
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Microeconometric Evaluation of Selected ESF-funded ALMP-Programmes
Eva Reinowski, Birgit Schultz
IWH Discussion Papers,
No. 17,
2006
Abstract
The study evaluates different ESF-funded labour market programmes by comparing the labour market status at different points in time after the treatment. In order to solve the selection problem we employ a standard matching algorithm with a multi-dimensional distance measure. The effects of the analyzed programmes (wage subsidies, start-up subsidies and qualification measures for recipients of social welfare) are very heterogeneous. It can be observed that the direct integration into the regular labour market provides an advantage for the supported individuals. Its lasting effects, however, strongly depend on the group of persons being supported, the type of treatment and the employers’ financial share.
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Money and Credit Market Integration in an enlarging Euro Zone: Methodological Issues
Johannes Stephan, Jens Hölscher
European Economic Policies - Alteratives to Orthodox Analysis and Policy Concepts,
2006
Abstract
“The chapter discusses methodological issues of money and credit market integration within the context of an enlarging Euro area. Common methods of interest parity tests are rejected in favour of a comparison of nominal interest rates. Hölscher and Stephan find that from an institutional point of view the new EU member countries look under-banked, whereas interest rates are converging. As policy implication the paper argues for a Euro adoption of the new EU members rather sooner than later.“
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Economies of scope duly considered for the IPO of the Deutsche Bahn?
Christian Growitsch, Heike Wetzel
Wirtschaft im Wandel,
No. 8,
2006
Abstract
Die aktuelle Diskussion um den Umfang des Börsengangs der Deutschen Bahn – unter Einbeziehung des Schienennetzes oder nicht – konzentriert sich im wesentlichen auf Fragen der Wettbewerbswirkung und der zukünftigen Belastung des Staatshaushaltes. Eventuelle Vorteile der bestehenden Organisationsform der Deutschen Bahn, also eines vertikal integrierten Eisenbahnunternehmens, das sowohl den Infrastrukturzugang als auch Transportdienstleistungen anbietet, blieben trotz ihrer Bestätigung in einer Vielzahl theoretischer Analysen weitgehend unberücksichtigt. Die Deutsche Bahn äußerte nun die Befürchtung, daß eine solche Separierung Vorteile der vertikalen Integration (sogenannte Verbundvorteile) vermindern würde und somit nicht geeignet sei, die gesamtgesellschaftliche Wohlfahrt zu erhöhen. In einer paneuropäischen Analyse der Produktivität europäischer Eisenbahnunternehmen wird mit dem Fokus der Untersuchung auf etwaige Verbundvorteile überprüft, ob integrierte Eisenbahnunternehmen eine höhere technische Effizienz aufweisen als vertikal separierte Unternehmen. Dazu wird ein Modell erstellt, das die Effizienz der integrierten Produktionstechnologie im Verhältnis zu einer Referenzgruppe virtueller, aus den separierten Unternehmen konstruierter Beobachtungseinheiten berechnet. Die Ergebnisse weisen auf existierende Verbundvorteile für die Mehrzahl der europäischen Eisenbahnunternehmen hin. Dies sollte in der Entscheidung hinsichtlich des Börsengangs der Deutschen Bahn explizite Berücksichtigung finden.
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