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Structural Change, Competitiveness and Industrial Policy: Painful Lessons from the European Periphery [Mīkstie vāki]

Edited by (ISCTE, Lisbon, Portugal), Edited by (University of Porto, Portugal), Edited by (University of Porto, Portugal)
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The onset of the global crisis has emphasised the persistence of substantial differences in development and social progress within the euro area. The specific case of countries located in the southern periphery region has come to the centre stage, due to the harsh economic conditions that all these countries have experienced in the recent past.



In the aftermath of the American subprime credit bubble, these countries’ high indebtedness raised doubts as to their ability to sustain public finances, with the financial crisis developing and gaining momentum due to the fragilities presented in the economy. To varying degrees of severity, all of these economies have since been forced to introduce strong fiscal tightening programmes in order to achieve fiscal consolidation, which have translated into recession and rising unemployment.



This book undertakes a comprehensive analysis of the causes of the crisis in southern European countries, showing that the ‘Achilles heel’ of these economies is rooted in the dismal evolution of productivity and in a specialisation pattern excessively based on the so-called ‘traditional’, low, and low-medium tech industries, which yield low margins, declining export shares and, ultimately, withering international competitiveness. Such evidence suggests that the southern European periphery industrial growth model has reached its limits, demanding a multidimensional policy approach capable of overcoming the magnitude and complexity of the present crisis.



Without denying the need to adjust public and private balance sheets, it is argued that finding a sustainable path out of the present problems requires addressing the challenges of productivity growth and competitiveness in the long term.



The onset of the global crisis has emphasised the persistence of substantial differences in development and social progress within the euro area. The specific case of countries located in the southern periphery region has come to the centre stage, due to the harsh economic conditions that all these countries have experienced in the recent past.

List of figures
vii
List of tables
xi
List of boxes
xiii
List of contributors
xv
PART I The Context: EMU, Convergence, Austerity
1(102)
1 Introduction: Structural change, competitiveness and industrial policy
3(7)
Ester Gomes Da Silva
Aurora A.C. Teixeira
2 The unsustainable divergence of national productive systems
10(33)
Robert Boyer
3 Convergence and imbalances in the EMU - the case of Portugal
43(24)
Fernando Teixeira Dos Santos
4 We'll still be here in the long run - austerity and the peripheral growth hypothesis
67(13)
Miguel St. Aubyn
5 The euro crisis and the failure of the Lisbon strategy
80(23)
Bengt-Ake Lundvall
Edward Lorenz
PART II Structural Change and Competitiveness in the European Periphery
103(116)
6 Structural and technological change in the European periphery
105(28)
Argentino Pessoa
7 National adaptive advantages: Soft innovation and marketing capabilities in periods of crisis and change
133(18)
Sandro Mendonca
8 Human capital and growth in services economies: The case of Portugal
151(31)
Marta C. N. Simg-Es
Adelaide Duarte
9 Learning, exporting and firm productivity: Evidence from Portuguese manufacturing and services firms
182(20)
Carlos Carreira
10 Productive experience and structural transformation: The cases of Portugal, Spain, Greece, Italy and Germany
202(17)
Miguel Lebre De Freitas
Luis C. Nunes
Rui Costa Neves
PART III Policy Issues
219(84)
11 Industrial policy in times of crisis: The case of Greece
221(20)
Tassos Giannitsis
Ioanna Kastelli
12 The Italian economy, the economic crisis and industrial policy
241(17)
Michele Di Maio
13 Assessment and challenges of industrial policies in Portugal: Is there a way out of the "stuck in the middle" trap?
258(20)
Ricardo Paes Mamede
Manuel Mira Godinho
Vitor Corado Simoes
14 The industrial sector of Spain in search of a new policy
278(21)
Jose Molero
Ines Granda
15 Conclusion
299(4)
Ricardo Paes Mamede
References 303(20)
Index 323
Aurora A.C. Teixeira is Associate Professor with Habilitation, Faculdade de Economia, Universidade do Porto, Portugal

Ester G. Silva is Assistant Professor at Faculdade de Letras, Universidade do Porto, Portugal

Ricardo Paes Mamede is Assistant Professor at ISCTE IUL, Lisbon, Portugal