INSTITUTE FOR WORLD ECONOMICS HUNGARIAN ACADEMY OF SCIENCES
REPORT ON ACTIVITIES 2007
Budapest, 2008
Contents 1. Outline of the Institute....................................................................................................... 5 1.1. Objectives..................................................................................................................... 5 1.2. Structure ....................................................................................................................... 6 1.3. Financing...................................................................................................................... 7 1.4. Research Priorities ....................................................................................................... 7 1.5. Library and Scientific Information Service.................................................................. 9 1.6. Publication and Dissemination Policies ....................................................................... 9 1.7. International Contacts ................................................................................................ 10 2. Principal Research Projects in 2007............................................................................... 12 2.1. Global Issues .............................................................................................................. 12 2.2. EU Issues.................................................................................................................... 14 2.3. The CEECs and Hungary ........................................................................................... 19 2.4. Selected Topics .......................................................................................................... 22 3. Major Research Projects Prepared for Hungarian Policy Makers............................. 25 4. Major Projects in Preparation Financed by Hungarian Research Funds.................. 27 5. Coordination of and Participation in International Projects ...................................... 28 6. Publications ...................................................................................................................... 30 6.1. IWE Publications in 2007 .......................................................................................... 30 6.1.1. Working Papers ....................................................................................................... 30 6.1.2. Kihívások (‘Challenges’ – in Hungarian) ............................................................... 30 6.1.3. Műhelytanulmányok (‘Workshop Studies’ – in Hungarian)................................... 31 6.1.4. Vélemények, Kommentárok, Információk (‘Opinions, Comments, Information’ – in Hungarian) .................................................................................. 31 6.1.5. Joint Publications .................................................................................................... 32 6.1.6. Occasional Publications .......................................................................................... 33 6.2. Publications by IWE Staff Members in 2007 (titles in the language of publications) ...................................................................... 35 7. Lectures Delivered Abroad or at International Conferences Held in Hungary (italicized titles in the language of the lecture).................................................................. 60 8. International Conferences Organized by IWE in 2007 ................................................ 69 9. Foreign Guests at IWE in 2007....................................................................................... 70 Appendix ............................................................................................................................... 74
Outline of the Institute
5
1. OUTLINE OF THE INSTITUTE 1.1. Objectives The Institute for World Economics (IWE), as part of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, carries out research and formulates policy recommendations on an objective, non-partisan basis, since its establishment in 1973 on the institutional background of the former Afro-Asian Research Centre founded in 1965, three years before the first wave of economic reform in Hungary. The Institute has become one of the major policy-oriented international research institutes and economic policy think tanks in Central Europe. Its main task is to study the underlying trends and factors behind global and regional economic developments and their present and future impact on the Hungarian economy. In addition, it sets out to contribute to international research through cooperation with top research institutes throughout the world. Because of its location, history and human and material resources, the IWE is particularly well placed to be a leading centre for research on the integration of Central and Eastern Europe into the global market economy. The change of political system in Hungary, the transition to a market economy as well as the coming enlargement of the European Union and new global challenges have greatly enhanced the importance of world economic research and altered the emphasis of it. The IWE sets out to give strategic support during this historic change of course: ∗ by drawing on the Institute's long experience and extensive and effective system of international connections to build up a reformulated programme of research, and ∗ by using the techniques of comparative economic analysis and interdisciplinary investigations. The Institute's research philosophy is based on the conviction that the transition to a market economy and the accession to the European Union are not an end in themselves but a means of shifting the Hungarian economy from the periphery towards the mainstream of global economic development. Central to this is the need to modernize, in view of Hungary's modest level of economic development by comparison with Western Europe. International comparisons of the path taken to modernization and the blind alleys to be avoided are being made, in order to identify the key areas in which the Hungarian economy has to catch up and the requirements and means for doing so. Moreover the transition to a market economy is taking place in an international, and particularly a European economic environment of unprecedented upheavals and a system of relations in the process of restructuring. Whereas, on the global scale, some of the other attempts to modernize in the more recent past took place within a stable, predictable system of international relations, the forecast in Hungary's case is that the international economic environment will be uncertain, or at least multidimensional. This country has to build up a system of economic relations that takes account of its comparative advantages against a background of a moving Europe itself undergoing adjustment. The criteria for choosing the IWE's research areas have been the medium-term demands of decisive importance in terms of the processes taking place in the world economy and the adjustment that Hungary must take, coupled with the comparative advantages offered by the Insti-
6
Outline of the Institute
tute itself. This is a pioneer undertaking for the future: instead of resting on short-term, ad hoc requirements, it is built on a long-term strategic demand that must be created in part by the Institute itself with the demand-oriented nature of its researches. This we see as the way to ensure that the IWE is a professionally respected, authoritative, influential, opinion-shaping institute. These objectives can be served by the Institute's present research staff as a whole. After the appreciable staff losses of the early nineties, the internationally reputed, competitive and highly experienced research team has been replenished with ambitious and productive young researchers. The funds, however limited, granted by the Hungarian Academy of Sciences guarantee the political independence, so providing one of the fundamental external conditions for scientific activity of a high standard. * In 2007, basic conditions for substantive research at IWE were able to rely on a consolidated financial background due in part to increasing cooperation with different government institutions. * IWE, in cooperation with other research institutes (largely belonging to the Academy of Sciences), undertook a coordinative function in developing a medium-term strategy of research priorities on European integration. * Cooperation with leading international and Western European economic institutions was further strengthened. * Demand for IWE's research output by leading Hungarian banks, companies and multinational firms located in Hungary grew substantially. * A special system of fellowships managed by the Academy of Sciences provided an opportunity to employ some young researchers and cover selected basic areas of research. * Interdisciplinary research network has strengthened as the Social Sciences Research Centre came into being in the framework of the consolidation programme of the Academy of Sciences. In the Centre IWE and several other legally and financially independent institutes cooperate concerning political, social, legal, and economic issues.
1.2. Structure The IWE had a research staff of 31 at the end of 2007, and an auxiliary, service staff of 17. As of January 1996, the executive structure was changed. Based on the experience of previous years and the accomplishment of the substantially enhanced research tasks recently, IWE has eliminated the traditional structure based on research centres. In fact, organization of the research activities has never been carried out in a rigid system. In contrast to many institutes, IWE has always stressed the importance of ‘cross-working’, and provided opportunity for its staff to become acquainted with research activities of other centres within the Institute. To a substantial extent, growing domestic and international competitiveness of the research staff can be explained by this flexibility. From the beginning of 1996, IWE's internal structure is based on teams organized for special topics and purposes. As a result a ‘research network’ was created, in which practically each staff member is both the director of one or more research teams and member of other teams, simultaneously. This approach is expected to make research even more efficient, to use available capacities better and deal with priority tasks from different angles. A Research Council created in 1996 and consisting of 11 staff members, including talented young researchers, directs and supervises research activities. In selected areas of ensuring the infrastructure of efficient research, three commissions, each of which consists of three staff members, have been acting (acquisition of books, journals and documents, computerisation, publishing activities). Since early summer 1999 a managing director has also been acting who is responsible for internal and external contacts, communications and public relations.
Structure of the Institute for World Economics Mihály Simai Research Professor
General András Inotai
Library Commission Computer Commission
Treasur
Scientific Information Servic Head: A. Kovács
Head: E. Financia Grou
Maintenanc Servic
Librar Sectio
Directoria Secretaria
Managing Director Éva Nagy
Publications' Commission
Section Internationa Exchange
Section Documentation
Section of Publication Head: Gábor Fóti
Section of International Cooperation and Marketing Head: Anikó Gyorgyovich
Secretariat Head: Andrea Vincze
Japan, East and Southeast Asia Research Centre Head: András Hernádi
Printing
Various Research Teams Headed by Staff Mem-
Staff Members
Outline of the Institute
7
In order to appropriately cope with growing research commitments, to ensure the education and training of young researchers and to use financial resources more efficiently, a special ‘external research work’ has been extended, as part of the long-term and deliberate strategy of IWE.
1.3. Financing The tasks laid down in its deed of foundation and the new demands made by the changes taking place in the world economic environment make it essential for the dominance of direct state funding in the Institute's finances to remain. This conclusion is also supported by the widespread international practice of financing institutions that conduct strategic research out of central funds as a way of ensuring a high standard of activity. While strategic research institutes are generally financed in 60 to 70% of their annual budget from central funds throughout the world, contrary tendencies prevailed in IWE's financial situation until 2002, as central funds were limited to basic salaries and their non-wage labour costs. In 2007, however, IWE's total income amounted to HUF 310 mn (about USD 1.9 mn), of which slightly less than 78 per cent was provided by the Hungarian Academy of Sciences and Hungarian research funds. Other major items of income included various domestic sources (10 per cent), participation in international cooperation (5 per cent) and an overhang from fiscal year 2006 (7 per cent). Total expenditure reached HUF 300 mn (about USD 1.8 mn), of which wages, income taxes and social security contributions accounted for almost 72 per cent. Additional major items of expenditure were other research supporting expenses (25 per cent) and communal services and maintenance (3 per cent). The stable and relatively favourable financial situation is the result of the high professional level of the Institute, the attractiveness and practical usefulness of its research results as well as the successful search for new resources. As a rare exception among other academic research institutes, IWE possesses a solid financial background for 2008, which enables it to carry out strategic policy-oriented research and cement longer-term development concepts during the coming years.
1.4. Research Priorities Research activities were characterised by 22 major projects during last year. Contrary to the ruling tendency of the 90s, there was a clear shift from shorter-term to longer-term research in the new decade, though it remained highly policy-oriented still. Nine principal research projects were finished during the year (out of which only two had a duration of less than a year), and nine projects were initiated in 2007. Three research projects started earlier and spread beyond 2007. Research is fundamentally carried out on two basic levels: regional (geographic) and functional. Almost all research projects combine these two approaches, while staff members have to specialise themselves on one regional and at least on one functional topic. Priority areas of research in recent years: (a) Global economic development and transformation ∗ the universal issue of economic security; ∗ interrelationship of knowledge, growth and globalization; science and technology as a growth factor in smaller economies; ∗ sustainable development amid a system of terms under intensive world-market impacts;
8
Outline of the Institute ∗ fundamental medium-term changes in the world economy and their impact on Hungary; ∗ interactions and human dimensions of global demographic, political, economic, technical and social transformation; ∗ globalization and regionalization, with special reference to international capital and labour markets; ∗ relevant features and development trends of the new regionalism; ∗ role of the transnational companies in the shaping of a new global economic system; ∗ current issues of international trade and the role of WTO; ∗ interrelation between globalization and economic transformation; ∗ basic trends of consumption globally and in Central and Eastern Europe.
(b) Economic developments in Europe, with special attention paid to the European Union and Eastern enlargement ∗ the development paths and modernization of selected European countries; ∗ relationship between community policies and different national policies; ∗ key integration processes in the European Union (common agricultural policy, economic and monetary union, experience of the Union's periphery with catching up, institutional reform, experience of ex-EFTA countries in the European Union, regional development, budgetary issues, developments in major EU member countries); ∗ main features of ‘developmental integration’ and Eastern enlargement; ∗ interdependence between European integration and subregional cooperation; ∗ the major features of Germany's European policy at the beginning of the 21st century. (c) Economic transformation in Central and Eastern Europe ∗ comparative analysis of the CEFTA countries; ∗ transformation and external trade relations, including the changing pattern of East–West division of labour; ∗ impact of foreign direct investment on the macro- and microeconomic performance of transforming countries; ∗ chances of regional cooperation; ∗ economic and political development in Southeast Europe; ∗ the accession of Hungarian agriculture and rural regions to the EU; ∗ Hungarian foreign trade structures in comparison with those of the EU; ∗ the structural transformation of Hungarian manufacturing industry. (d) New economic developments in the Asia-Pacific Region ∗ the lessons drawn from the Far Eastern economic development; ∗ Japan's decade-long stagnation or transformation rather than crisis; ∗ transformation patterns in China and Southeast Asia; ∗ the Chinese Diaspora and the chances of a ‘Chinese Common Market’; ∗ constant and changing elements in the Japanese model of development; ∗ prospects of Korean – Hungarian economic relations. (e) Other key research areas ∗ human development in Hungary; ∗ impact of socio-economic values on the pattern of development; ∗ possible scenarios of economic and social development in Latin America; ∗ micro-level adjustment and cooperation; ∗ the role of infrastructure and services in the modernization process;
Outline of the Institute
9
∗ the role of clusters in regional development policy; ∗ the measuring of the efficiency impacts of foreign direct investment; ∗ sectoral studies.
1.5. Library and Scientific Information Service The IWE's library is a specialised scientific library with national scope. It contains one of Hungary's most important and most up-to-date collections of books, periodicals and statistics on international economic affairs. Since 2000 the library constitutes part of the United Library for Social Sciences together with the libraries of the Institute for Political Sciences, the Institute for Sociology, and the Institute for Minority Research. Through consistent and constant expansion of the IWE's international relations, about 70% of the books and periodicals, including most of the foreign books, have been acquired on exchange base. This is already the case with some publications of the World Bank, the IMF, the OECD and the EU. In addition, almost three-quarters of the annual increase in value of the stock is accounted for publications that arrive under exchanges schemes or as gifts. This remarkably high proportion by national standards ties in with the Institute's own publishing activity. The task of the Scientific Information Service is to obtain the information required for research work, examine it comprehensively, store it, make it available, and distribute the Institute's publications through the conduct of international publication exchanges. The enlarged library’s stock contains more than 250,000 items (including 35,000 archives and almost six hundred kinds of periodicals). Also, the establishment of a CD ROM databank was started and will be further developed in accordance with the financial possibilities of IWE. Last year the Institute was successful in creating the availability of publication distribution via e-mail among all its exchange partners who apply for it. (This may result in substantial savings of postage.) The library's cumulative catalogue can also be searched by the aid of Internet: www.etk.mtapti.hu On the WIIW's (Wiener Institut für Internationale Wirtschaftsvergleiche – The Vienna Institute for Comparative Economic Studies) request IWE has joined the WIIW's "Countdown" project and become its Hungarian coordinator. The project aims at collecting in a joint database the names of Central and East European experts working on the European Union, by indicating their activities and the particulars of published as well as unpublished works on the Union prepared in the Central and East European region, mainly in Hungary and available in the library of the Institute. For information about the library please contact our information service, telephone: (36-1) 224 6759.
1.6. Publication and Dissemination Policies In 2007, the publication policy of the IWE followed in the framework of substantial changes introduced in the early 90s. This publication policy was justified by IWE's growing reputation at home and abroad, its scientific and economy-policy objectives, and not least its aim of influencing public opinion. Nine independent books explain the sharp decline in the number of stuies appearing in the series of the Institute.
10
Outline of the Institute
Last year the series Working Papers, Kihívások (Challenges), and Műhelytanulmányok (Workshop Studies) appeared with 4, 3 and 1 issues, respectively. The Working Papers series in English presents the best and internationally competitive products of research by IWE staff, primarily to the professional public abroad. Kihívások, in Hungarian, is designed to inform Hungarian economic policy-makers, members of Parliament, political parties and the broader professional public about current worldeconomic issues, their impact on Hungary and the economic policy measures proposed to be taken. Most of the articles provide clear, readable summaries of significant research work undertaken in the Institute. Műhelytanulmányok, also in Hungarian, presents comprehensive and in-depth analyses, mostly summary reports of major research projects carried out or coordinated by IWE staff members, for the professional community and students of economics in Hungary. Vélemények, Kommentárok, Információk (Opinions, Comments, Information) is a concise series launched late 200l in Hungarian, and meant for the professional public as well as a wider circle interested in domestic and global issues of the day. Twelve of these short notices appeared in 2007. Our Newsletter (Hírfutár), available only in Hungarian so far, is designed to inform the professional public about the ongoing activities at IWE. The Institute’s restructured, new homepage on the Internet offers the possibility of interactive communication in addition to the regularly updated information about IWE (www.vki.hu). The publication activities were complemented by occasional volumes reproducing the proceedings of high-level international conferences or comprehending the findings of major international projects run by the Institute. Last year, as underlined before, nine such independent books appeared. In 2007, staff members published 67 contributions in foreign languages, including two books and 45 papers contained in books. Eleven contributions appeared in international journals. In order to disseminate IWE's research findings to a broad interested public as well, the Institute regularly organises ‘open conferences’ on relevant and topical global and European issues. Teaching represents an increasingly important activity of most staff members. Based on the basic research results and the fundamentally policy-oriented approach of IWE, we experience a rapidly growing need for dissemination on various levels. Staff members teach regularly in universities both in Hungary (Budapest and several universities in major towns) and abroad, while its director general is a visiting professor to the College of Europe, Bruges, Belgium and Natolin, Poland.
1.7. International Contacts The IWE's international relations have traditionally been very extensive, active and useful. In recent years, the Institute has taken part on average in ten to fifteen international research programmes a year, and organized about ten bilateral and international conferences annually. There is close cooperation with some 30 research institutes, scientific institutions and universities. Staff members travel abroad frequently, and the Institute receives visiting foreign researchers in considerable numbers. In the same year, IWE was a member of five reputed international scientific bodies (the EADI, the ECSA, the IFIAS, the UNU, and the Centre for Our Common Future). Close collaboration has been built up with the most influential international agencies (the IMF, the World Bank, OECD, WTO, Unctad, Unesco, UNDP, Unido, Uncitral, ELEC, CIPE, ECE, etc.). Similarly to recent years, in 2007 we were coordinators of and participants in several international projects. IWE has built up a special relationship with various
Outline of the Institute
11
EU organisations and the Friedrich Ebert Foundation in launching new projects, and assumes a leading coordinating role both in research and dissemination of the findings. In 2007, staff members delivered lectures in foreign languages about one hundred in different parts of the world and at international seminars held in Hungary. Seven international conferences were organized in the past year. In addition, IWE's international network includes longer-term stays of its researchers abroad, work contracts of its staff in leading foreign institutes and international institutions. The Institute's medium-term research concept envisages further significant development of its international relations with some alterations in their nature. The initiative hitherto was usually taken by the IWE, but the change of political and economic system has greatly increased the number of foreign research institutes and international organizations proposing cooperation to the IWE. In line with the main directions of Hungary's economic relations, IWE aims particularly to expand its relations with European countries, including the EU and CEFTA, the United States, Japan and the East and Southeast Asian area. The Institute has already become the centre in Central and Eastern Europe for studies of Japan and Southeast Asia, and a regular informal platform for Latin American ambassadors on Hungarian, European and Latin American issues. Extra attention is given to developing scientific ties with neighbouring countries, particularly through joint research projects, and by inviting economists from these countries in order to promote mutual understanding and the flow of information, while also reinforcing IWE's relations with leading international and Western institutions.
Principal Research Projects in 2007
12
2. Principal Research Projects in 2007 2.1. Global Issues 2.1.1. Middle-term Projection of Global Economic Environment Project director: Péter Farkas Participants:
Annamária Artner, Péter Farkas, András Inotai, Judit Kiss, István Kőrösi, Andrea Szalavetz, Miklós Szanyi
Duration:
2007
Summary:
Studies were prepared in the following topics: (i) the changes in power relations of world politics and world economy up to 2020; (ii) the prognosis of the development of the world economy; (iii) the expected capital flow and the potential factors of international competitiveness; (iv) the role of company strategies; (v) the upgrading of human capital; (vi) the directions of technological development; (vii) the agriculture of the world. The main point of the conclusion concerning Hungarian foreign strategy is that the interests of economy and diplomacy has to be coordinated; a long-term and global strategic approach is needed. Besides European relations the processes of world economy and the changes of power relations are crucial.
2.1.2. Middle-term Forecast of Extraeconomic Elements of Global Environment Project director: Péter Farkas Participants:
Zoltán Ádám (ext.), Péter Farkas, Tamás Fleisher, Klára Fóti, Judit Kiss, Mihály Simai, Tamás Szigetvári
Duration:
2007
Summary:
Topics involved in the research: (i) the population of the world, migration and manpower market; (ii) the costs of environment protection; (iii) the changing economic role of the state; (iv) the advance of “development economics”; (v) the institutional structure of global economy; (vi) the economic and social models of successful closing up. According to the findings human and environmental elements are becoming increasingly important in competitiveness. The role of the state is changing, but do not decline in successful models.
Principal Research Projects in 2007 2.1.3.
13
Challenges of International Development Cooperation and Opportunities for Hungary
Project director: Judit Kiss Participants:
Péter Farkas, Erika Fodor (ext.), Viktor Kutas (ext.), Tamás Novák, Beáta Paragi (ext.), Balázs Szent-Iványi (ext.), Gábor Túry, Sára Vári (ext.)
Duration:
2007–2008
Summary:
The main goal of the project is to outline Hungarian development cooperation strategy with due regard to the expectations of the donor community, the recipients, the NGOs, the Hungarian taxpayers and business circles. In the first part of the research the major tendencies in the field of international development co-operation policy are going to be revealed with special attention to the strategy and practice of the bilateral donors (DAC countries, EU, European Development Fund) and multilateral agencies. Apart from the interest of the donor community, the expectations of the recipients are also going to be studied with special reference to the Millennium Development Goals and poverty reduction. In the second phase of the research the Hungarian development cooperation policy will be examined with special focus on project implementation, aid effectiveness and cost efficiency. Finally, recommendations will be given for outlining Hungarian development cooperation strategy. The research results will be discussed at a conference and published in a textbook-type publication. Recommendations will also be formulated for the Hungarian EU presidency due in 2011.
Principal Research Projects in 2007
14
2.2. EU Issues 2.2.1. “Beszélgessünk Európáról” – “Debate Europe” Project director: András Inotai Participants:
Sándor Meisel, Margit Rácz, Tamás Szigetvári
Duration:
2006–2007
Summary:
In the framework of the project “Beszélgessünk Európáról” (“Debate Europe”) sponsored by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs 25 papers were written. These papers are grouped into three clusters of issues: ∗ Further enlargement of the EU ∗ EU in the world ∗ Further deepening of the EU We analyzed the current situation regarding these three clusters of issues. We dealt with the future challenges and, in connection with them, we looked at the Hungarian interests.
2.2.2. Economic Relations between Russia and the Enlarged European Union with Special Regard to Central and Eastern European Countries Project director: Zsuzsa Ludvig Duration:
Continuous
Summary:
The project aims at analysing EU–Russian relations from a multidisciplinary view with special emphasis on economic aspects. Both general historical trends and some most important thematic issues (such as the common economic space, the energy dialogue and the impacts of the enlargement) have been studied through the analysis of official documents and statistics on mutual trade, investment and energy relations.
Principal Research Projects in 2007
15
2.2.3. EU 25/27 Watch Project directors: Barbara Lippert (ext.), Krisztina Vida Hungarian participant: Krisztina Vida Duration:
2004–2008
Summary:
The EU 25/27 Watch is a regularly (biannually) appearing comparative summary and analysis of national positions of the EU member states on topical issues. The issues are defined by the project director and sent out in the form of an extensive questionnaire. The outcome of the research is published every semester in electronic form. The aim of these publications is not only to present for the decision-makers, researchers and the wider public the member states' positions but also to display the underlying motivations and special interests of the countries forming the European Union. The EU 25/27 Watch is financed by the CONSENT project of the European Union's 6th Framework Programme.
2.2.4. NEWGOV – New Modes of Governance in the European Union Project directors: Kálmán Dezséri, Krisztina Vida Participants:
Zoltán Bassa (ext.), Kálmán Dezséri, Krisztina Vida, Anna Wisniewski
Duration:
2004–2008
Summary:
The NEWGOV multiannual interdisciplinary project is financed by the EU's 6th Framework Programme/Priority 7, under the heading of “Citizens and Governance in the Knowledge-based Society”. The aim of the project is to identify “new” or alternative modes of EU governance as opposed to the “old” or traditional modes (whereby upon Commission proposal the Council and the European Parliament decide on legally binding EU rules). New modes of governance are represented, for example, by a strong involvement of subnational (regional, local) or civil actors at the input side and nonbinding (voluntary) agreements or guidelines at the output side. The task of the Hungarian team was to find evidence and identify the potential new modes of governance under structural and cohesion policy at the level of both the EU and selected new member states (namely the Baltic States and the Visegrád countries). The papers had to detect the three “E-s”: the Emergence, Evolution and Evaluation of the phenomenon of new modes of governance and attempted to draw theoretical conclusions leading to a new approach in understanding European governance. The main conclusion of the findings is that new modes of governance under cohesion policy become overwhelmingly important when the EU as well as the beneficiary parties are searching for increased efficiency and subsidiarity. At the same time, the identified new modes of governance at both EU and member-states level only complement and do not substitute for the traditional or “old” modes of European governance.
Principal Research Projects in 2007
16
2.2.5. Perspectives of Employment Expansion amidst Globalization and Technological Changes – Experiences within the European Union and Opportunities in Hungary Project director: Klára Fóti Participants:
Annamária Artner, Péter Farkas, István Kőrösi, Margit Rácz, Miklós Somai, Miklós Szanyi
Duration:
2006–2007
Summary:
The project attempts to elaborate experiences of the EU-15. The research is concerned with opportunities for employment expansion and it examines this issue within the framework of case studies of some firms. The main objective of the project is to analyse if there is any chance for employment expansion within the context of challenges posed by technological development, and if there are some opportunities, what are the prerequisites for job creation (for example, which sectors are most promising in this respect in Hungary and more developed countries of the European Union).
2.2.6. The General Reform of the EU Budget – Economic Foundations, Political Conditions, Member State Interests, with Special Regard to the Point of View of Hungary
Project director: András Inotai Participants:
Miklós Somai, Tamás Szemlér
Duration:
2006–2007
Summary:
The aim of the project is to identify the reform needs of the EU budget, and evaluate the possible reform options from the point of view of economic and political feasibility. The project provides a critical analysis of the actual system, it tackles the main reform ideas on the own resources side, and describes potential shifts on the expenditure side, with special regard to the two actually biggest expenditure items, the Common Agricultural Policy and structural operations. Finally, it provides an analysis of political feasibility, taking into account – among other factors – the interests and positions of the EU member states.
Principal Research Projects in 2007
17
2.2.7. The Integration (Internal) Factors of Successful EU Membership Projekt directors:Péter Balázs (ext.), Margit Rácz Participants:
Klára Fóti, Sándor Meisel, Margit Rácz, Miklós Somai, Tamás Szemlér, András Székely-Doby, Tamás Szigetvári, Judit Szilágyi, Krisztina Vida
Duration:
2007
Summary:
We have dealt with the introductin of the possible answers to the external and internal challenges to the development of the European Union in this research project. Priority was given to common policies, especially to the likely reform of agricultural policy and the possible transformation of community budget as a whole. The questions of the convergence programme and the accession of Hungary to the euro area were also analyzed, similarly to the open questions of EU labour market in the framework of the further development of the internal single market.
2.2.8. The General Reform of the EU Budget – Economic Foundations, Political Conditions, Member State Interests, with Special Regard to the Point of View of Hungary
Project directors: András Inotai and Tamás Szemlér Participants:
András Bakács (ext.), András Inotai, Tamás Novák, Gábor Róbel, Miklós Somai, András Székely-Doby, Tamás Szemlér, Gábor Túry, Anna Wisniewski
Duration:
2007
Summary:
The aim of the project is to identify the reform needs of the EU budget, and evaluate the possible reform options from the point of view of economic and political feasibility. The project provides a critical analysis of the actual system, it tackles the main reform ideas on the own resources side, and describes potential shifts on the expenditure side, with special regard to the two currently biggest expenditure items, the Common Agricultural Policy and structural operations. Finally, it provides an analysis of political feasibility, taking into account – among other factors – the interests and positions of EU member states.
Principal Research Projects in 2007
18
2.2.9. International Experiences of the Use of EU Financial Support Project director: Tamás Szemlér Participant:
Klára Fóti, Sándor Meisel, Tamás Novák, András Székely-Doby, Tamás Szigetvári, Judit Szilágyi, Gábor Túry, Krisztina Vida, Anna Wisniewski
Duration:
2007–2008
Summary:
The research tackles experiences in six areas: 1. the effect of support on investments; 2. the effects of support on employment; the measurement of employment effects; 3. the effects of support on the competitiveness of the SMEs; 4. changes of conditionality of the use of Structural Funds support – reasons and effects; 5. changes (aiming at enhancing efficiency) in the evaluation and selection in the tendering process; 6. how to strengthen the spill-over effects of support – economic policy experiences.
2.2.10. The EU Budget Overview: A Survey of the Member-state Positions Project director: Tamás Szemlér Participants:
Andrea Éltető, Miklós Somai, Tamás Szemlér, Gábor Túry, Anna Wisniewski
Duration:
2007–2008
Summary:
The project aims to survey likely member-state positions on the EU budget overview. It includes a survey seeking answers to a number of questions that will most probably appear in the EU budget debate. The survey is based on previous proposals that have surfaced from the European Commission, the European Parliament and the respective Member States; and the timetable and proposal that was published by the European Commission in September 2007.
Principal Research Projects in 2007
19
2.3. The CEECs and Hungary 2.3.1. Agricultural Market Options after EU Accession Project director: Judit Kiss Participants:
Gábor Kőnig (ext.), Klára Mészáros, Miklós Somai
Duration:
2004–2007
Summary:
One of the main aims of the research is to reveal whether after EU accession Hungary succeeds in sustaining (maintaining) her net agricultural-export position in the markets of the EU–15 and that of the EU–25. The other aim of the research derives from the fact that after EU accession Hungarian agricultural production and agricultural-export potential is expected to grow while the EU provides only moderately expanding markets for Hungarian agricultural products despite enlargement. So, there will be a high need for alternative markets. Consequently, the other aim of the research is to reveal the kind of alternative market possibilities that are provided for Hungarian agricultural products in the coming years (till the period of 2010) outside the EU, namely in Russia, China and the developing countries. The other issue is how the emerging market possibilities can be utilised by Hungarian agricultural exporters. The research, which is mainly future-oriented and has a strategic nature, is divided in the following way: ∗ first, it analyses the situation of Hungarian agriculture and trade in agricultural products after EU accession; ∗ secondly, it makes medium-term forecast on the EU’s agricultural markets and on the Hungarian agricultural-export possibilities in the enlarged EU; ∗ thirdly, it reveals the alternative agricultural-market possibilities in the light of the changing agricultural situation of certain countries (China, Russia) and country groups (developing countries); and ∗ lastly, it examines how the emerging market possibilities can be utilised by Hungarian agriculture.
Principal Research Projects in 2007
20
2.3.2 Monitoring Report on the Performance of the New Member States in the European Union Project director: Krisztina Vida Participants:
András Bakács (ext.), Gábor Lakatos (ext.), Sándor Meisel, Judit Szilágyi, Gábor Túry, Csaba Weiner, Anna Wisniewski
Duration:
Continuous
Summary:
The aim of the project is to compare – along a set of political, legal, economic and social aspects – the performance of the eight new Central and Eastern European Member States in European integration that accessed the Union in 2004. The country analyses are followed by a comparative summary, a series of data and finally by tables containing the strengths and the weaknesses of the eight countries. As time passes by the most characteristic trends in these countries can well be detected regarding their performance as a member state.
2.3.3. The Possibilities of Employment Policy in the Age of Globalization Project director: Annamária Artner Duration:
2006–2007
Summary:
The research project examines Hungarian labour-market developments and the likely employment and social policy in the mirror of international trends and demands, with special regard to the imperatives generated by the demand of world-market competitiveness. As a result of the project the state of affairs and the policy recommendations can help governance and can also be used in third-level education.
Principal Research Projects in 2007
21
2.3.4. Hungary's CIS Strategy with Special Regard to Russia, Ukraine and Kazakhstan Project director: Zsuzsa Ludvig Participants:
Zoltán Sz. Bíró (ext.), András György Deák (ext.), Sándor Meisel, Mihály Simai, Krisztina Tarjányi, Csaba Weiner, Anna Wisniewski,
Duration:
2007–2008
Summary:
The main goal of the project is to develop and update knowledge about the post-Soviet area by launching new research schemes following up by publishing the results. It aims at encouraging the presentation and clashing of different professional opinions and approaches in domestic and international conferences and in other forums. Beside studying basic macro-economic issues, research carried out in the framework of the project of the Institute for World Economics focuses on the complex issue of energy and its interrelationship with foreign relations in the post-Soviet area with special emphasis on the economic aspects, however not avoiding the political implications. The ultimate goal of the project is to establish a kind of ‘virtual CIS centre’ that can gather all professional Hungarian ‘knowledge’ on the CIS region from the state, business and academic sectors. The Institute for Sociology of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences participates as co-partner in this strategic research project. IWE’s Russian and Ukrainian partner institutes are also involved in these research activities
Principal Research Projects in 2007
22
2.4. Selected Topics 2.4.1. Comparative Study and Analysis of EU and Japanese Affiliated Companies in Hungary and Other CEEs Project director: András Hernádi Participants:
Zoltán Bassa (ext.), Andrea Éltető, Miklós Szanyi
Duration:
2004–2007
Summary:
The project deals with Japanese companies’ direct investments in Hungary, the Czech Republic, Poland and Slovakia. A literature review of the topic is followed by an analysis of investments by Japanese, other Asian, American and European companies in the Hungarian electronics and car industries.
2.4.2. Technology Development and Structural Change Project director: Andrea Szalavetz Duration:
2006–2007
Summary:
I examined the relation between technical progress and productivity in the context of structural change and changes in the factor input mix. Main results are as follows: (1) Successive general purpose, paradigm creating technologies do not necessarily increase capital-intensity. As opposed to the widely shared view technical progress is not always labour-saving and capital-using. (2) Information technology for example had substantial capital-saving effect in specific types of capital and industries. (3) The effect of information technology revolution induced different reactions and different development in advanced economies, in high-performing Southeast-Asian countries and in countries catching-up with the help of FDI inflows. (4) In the latter country group the relation between changes in the output mix and in the structure of factor inputs does not follow the textbook thesis (the upgrading of the composition of output ought to be in line with the evolution of inputs, i.e. with increases in the capital-labour ratio and in the human capital intensity of production). The technology composition of output in these latter countries is similar to the one of an advanced economy, while values of the capital-labour ratio and the human capital- and R&Dintensities of production are similar to those of relatively underdeveloped economies
Principal Research Projects in 2007
23
2.4.3. The Reserve Army of the Third Millennium – Problems and Social Effects of Labour Market in Globalization Project director: Annamária Artner Duration:
2006–2009
Summary:
The three-year research is financed by the János Bolyai Research Fellowship program. It is dealing with the increasing amount of unemployed and atypically employed people. This phenomenon reflects, on the one hand, that the need for ‘live labour’ is decreasing in production due to information technologies. On the other hand, the sharpening market competition demands more weekly working hours and more intensive work from those who are employed. It leads to increasing social tensions being reflected in the activity of civil organizations and spontaneous protest movements.
2.4.4. Establishing Hungary’s China Strategy Project directors: András Inotai, Ottó Juhász (ext.) Participants:
Klára Mészáros, Ágnes Szunomár, Barna Tálas (ext.)
Duration:
2007–2008
Summary:
The Institute for World Economics has been involved in a major China project with the Hungarian Prime Minister’s Office since 2006. As a result of this strategic research, some aspects of China’s internal development and international relations have been analysed. The first year of this project produced about 15 studies, two conferences and one book – for the time being only in Hungarian. The project will continue in 2007–08. In this stage, we are planning to organize a regional network of experts and younger people – dealing with or interested in China – not only in Hungary but also in the countries of Central and Eastern Europe. The main aspects of the persistent research are the following: ∗ Internal reforms in the People’s Republic of China ∗ Foreign relations – China and the Commonwealth of Independent States ∗ Foreign relations – China and the European Union ∗ Chinese people living in Hungary ∗ Hungarian–Chinese relations
Principal Research Projects in 2007
24
2.4.2. Domestic and International Trends in Consumption Project director: András Hernádi Duration:
Continuous
Summary:
On the basis of the concept that consumption precedes and practically determines production, research was focused on whether Central East European economies and societies, and especially Hungary, can have an identity and follow a model different from that of international trends.
Projects Prepared for Hungarian Policy Makers
25
3. Major Research Projects Prepared for Hungarian Policy Makers Prepared for the MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS Debate Europe Project director: András Inotai Project coordinators: Sándor Meisel, Margit Rácz, Tamás Szigetvári Hungary's Foreign Policy Strategy Project director: András Inotai Project coordinators: Péter Farkas, Tamás Novák, Margit Rácz Strategy of International Relations Strategical Issues of the Successful EU Membership Project coordinator: Sándor Meisel The Integration (Internal) Factors of Successful EU Membership Project directors: Péter Balázs (ext.), Margit Rácz
Prepared for the HUNGARIAN ACADEMY OF SCIENCES and the PRIME MINISTER’S OFFICE Policy Relevant Aspects of Hungarian Competitiveness Project director: András Inotai Challenges of International Development Cooperation and Opportunities for Hungary Project director: Judit Kiss Hungary's CIS Strategy with Special Regard to Russia, Ukraine and Kazakhstan Project director: Zsuzsa Ludvig The General Reform of the EU Budget – Economic Foundations, Political Conditions, Member-state Interests, with Special Regard to the Point of View of Hungary Project directors: András Inotai and Tamás Szemlér Establishing Hungary’s China Strategy Project directors: András Inotai, Ottó Juhász (ext.)
Projects Prepared for Hungarian Policy Makers
26
Prepared for the NATIONAL OFFICE FOR REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT Possible Role of Hungary in Central, Eastern and Southeast European Co-operation for Regional Development Project coordinator: Centre of Regional Studies for the Hungarian Academy of Sciences West Hungarian Research Institute Project participant: Csaba Weiner Comparative Study and Analysis of EU and Japanese Affiliated Companies in Hungary and Other CEEs Project director: András Hernádi Prepared for the MINISTRY OF ECONOMY AND TRANSPORT Investment Needs of Southeast European Countries as a Result of Stabilisation and Association Process Project participant: Tamás Novák Prospects of Hungarian Capital Exports Project coordinator: Annamária Artner
Prepared for the NATIONAL EMPLOYMENT FOUNDATION Prospects of Employment Expansion amidst Globalization and Technological Changes – Experiences within the European Union and Opportunities in Hungary Project coordinator: Klára Fóti
Prepared for the NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT AGENCY International Experiences of the Use of EU Financial Support Project coordinator: Tamás Szemlér
Projects Financed by Hungarian Research Funds
27
4. Major Projects in Preparation Financed by Hungarian Research Funds
Research topic
Coordinator
Period
Agricultural Market Options after EU Accession
Judit Kiss
2004–2007
Technology Development and Structural Change
Andrea Szalavetz
2006–2007
The Possibilities of Employment in the Age of Globalization
Annamária Artner
2006–2008
Annamária Artner
2006–2009
Mihály Simai
2007–2010
Annamária Artner
2006–2009
Miklós Szanyi
2007–2008
OTKA*
The Opportunities of Employment Policy in the Age of Globalization: International Trends, Hungarian Prospects Russia in the Global System and in Europe
János Bolyai Research Fellowship The Reserve Army of the Third Millennium – Problems and Social Effects of Labour Market in Globalization NKTH** Small Enterprise Development in Agglomerational and Dynamic Clusters – International and Hungarian Experinces
*
OTKA = National Research Fund for Social Sciences NKTH = National Research and Technology Office
**
28
Coordination of and Participation in International Projects
5. Coordination of and Participation in International Projects New Modes of Governance Coordinator: NEWGOV European University Institute, Florence EU’s 6th Framework Programmes Hungarian coordinator: Kálmán Dezséri, Krisztina Vida EU25/27 Watch IEP–TEPSA Project Coordinator: Institut für Europaische Politik, Berlin Hungarian coordinators: Krisztina Vida, Gábor Lakatos Emerging Value Clusters in the New Member States: The Role of Networks for Collaborative Innovation EU 6th FrameworkProgramme, European Commission (COMIST) Coordinator: Roberto Santoro, ESoCE Net, Rome, Italy Participants: CEIA Central and Southeast European Innovation Area, Institute of Communication and Information Technologies, Poland; Researchers Association of Slovenia; Helsinki School of Economics Hungarian coordinator: Andrea Szalavetz Ukrainian Economy in Europe Coordinator: Austrian Science and Research Liaison Office (ASO) in Budapest Hungarian participant: Zsuzsa Ludvig The Global Social Situation in the Early 21st Century Coordinator: United Nations, Social Division, New York Hungarian participant: Mihály Simai Eurointegration Challenges in Hungarian–Ukrainian Economic Relations Coordinator: Institute for Economic Forecasting, Ukrainian National Academy of Sciences Hungarian participant: Zsuzsa Ludvig EU CONSENT, Constructing Europe Network EU’s 6th Framework Programme Hungarian coordinator: Kálmán Dezséri Wider Europe, Deeper Integration – Constructing Europe CONSENT, EU”s 6th Framework Programme EU 27Watch Hungarian coordinators: András Inotai, Kálmán Dezséri
Coordination of and Participation in International Projects
29
The Role of Human Capital in International Competitiveness. Transatlantic Comparison of Experience with Migration in the US and the EU German Marshall Fund and the Economic Policy Institute, Sofia, Bulgaria Hungarian participant: Klára Fóti Foresight of Industrial Relations, 2025 European Foundation for the Improvement of Living and Working Conditions Hungarian participant: Klára Fóti The Implications of EU Membership on Immigration Trends and Immigrant Integration Policies for the Bulgarian Labour Market German Marshall Fund and the Economic Policy Institute, Sofia, Bulgaria Hungarian participant: Klára Fóti Trade and Investment Co-operation Policy between the EU and Korea since the Eastern Enlargement Seoul European Institute, Konkuk University Hungarian participant: Sándor Meisel The EU Budget Overview: A Survey of the Member-state Positions Swedish Institute for European Policy Studies (SIEPS) Hungarian coordinator: Tamás Szemlér
The Institute’s Publications in 2007
30
6. Publications 6.1. IWE Publications in 2007 6.1.1. Working Papers No.175 Gábor FÓTI – Zsuzsa LUDVIG eds. The Ukrainian Economy in Europe. 45 p. No.176 Iwona MERTIN – Ognian N. HISHOW Analysis of the Success and Failure in the Labour Markets of Selected EU Member-states. Macroeconomic Aspects. 25 p. No.177 David ELLISON Subnational Regionalism in a Supranational Context: the Case of Hungary. 31 p. No. 178 Péter FARKAS Behind the Figures. The Main Foreign Trade-related Factors Affecting World Economic Growth since 1990. 26 p.
6.1.2. Kihívások (‘Challenges’ – in Hungarian) No.188 Judit KISS Szertefoszló agrárremények, avagy EU-csatlakozásunk agrár-külkereskedelmi hatása. 8 p. (Dissolving Agricultural Hopes or else, the Agricultural Foreign-trade Effect of Hungary’s EU Accession) No.189 Csaba WEINER Beszámoló Litvánia harmadik uniós évéről (2006. május 1.–2007. április 30.). 24 p. (Report on Lithuania’s Third Year in the Union)
The Institute’s Publications in 2007
31
No.190 Miklós SZANYI Magyar csempe, román csapágy; elmélkedés átalakuló országok egymás közötti tőkebefektetéseiről. 12 p. (Hungarian Tiles, Romanian Ball Bearings; Meditating on the Investment Activities of Transition Countries among One Another)
6.1.3. Műhelytanulmányok (‘Workshop Studies’ – in Hungarian) No.76 Miklós SZANYI Külföldi befektetésekre alapozott fejlődési modell a XXI. század elején Magyarországon. 55 p. (Foreign-investment-based Development Model in Hungary at the Beginning of the 21st Century)
6.1.4. Vélemények, Kommentárok, Információk (‘Opinions, Comments, Information’ – in Hungarian) No.142 Csaba WEINER Rövid helyzetkép Oroszországról a 2000-es évek közepén. 2 p. (Snapshot at Russia in the Middle of the Decade) No.143 Tamás NOVÁK Szerbia a választások után – politikai és gazdasági kockázatok a láthatáron. 3 p. (Serbia after Election – Political and Economic Risks on the Horizon) No.144 Péter FARKAS Gyengül a dollár világpénzszerepe. 1 p. (Dollar’s World-money Role Weakens) No.145 Margit RÁCZ Az első 50 év után. A német elnökséget záró EU-csúcsról. 2 p. (After the First 50 Years. On the EU Summit Closing German Presidency) No.146 Tamás SZIGETVÁRI Törökországi választások. Maradnak az iszlamisták. 2 p. (Turkish Elections. Islamists Stay)
32
The Institute’s Publications in 2007
No.147 Kálmán DEZSÉRI Az áfarendszer felülvizsgálata az Európai Unióban. 2 p. (The Revision of the General-sales-tax System in the European Union) No.148 Péter FARKAS Ingatlan vagy ingó? Az amerikai ingatlanpiac és a világgazdaság. 2 p. (Stable or Unstable. The American Real Estate Market and the World Economy) No.149 Kálmán DEZSÉRI Rögös az út a reformszerződésig. 2 p. (Bumpy Is the Road to the Reform Treaty) No.150 Anna WISNIEWSKI Gazdaságpolitika a lengyel választások után. 2 p. (Economic Policy after Polish Elections) No.151 Margit RÁCZ Merre tovább Németország a CDU hannoveri kongresszusa után? 2 p. (Where to Go Germany after the Hannover Congress of CDU?) No.152 Krisztina VIDA Laekentől Lisszabonig – az alkotmányozási kísérlettől a reformszerződésig. 2 p. (From Laeken to Lisbon – from the Constitutional Trial to the Reform Treaty) No.153 Zsuzsa LUDVIG Két kelet-európai választás: régi-új arcok – régi dilemmák? 2 p. (Two East European Elections: Old and New Faces – Old Dilemmas)
6.1.5. Joint Publications Péter FARKAS – Gábor FÓTI eds. Magyarország globális környezete 2020-ig (Háttértanulmányok a magyar külstratégiához, 1.) (The Global Environment of Hungary till 2020 [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 1]), Budapest : IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, 290 p.
The Institute’s Publications in 2007
33
Gábor FÓTI – Tamás NOVÁK eds. A gazdasági biztonság kihívásai (Háttértanulmányok a magyar külstratégiához, 2.) (Challenges of Economic Security [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 2]), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, 201 p. Gábor FÓTI – Margit RÁCZ eds. Az Európai Unió előtt álló kihívásokról és a magyar érdekekről (Háttértanulmányok a magyar külstratégiához, 3.) (On the Challenges Facing the European Union and on the Hungarian Interests [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 3]), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, 240 p. Péter BALÁZS – Tamás SZEMLÉR eds. EU-költségvetés: kihívások és reformtervek (EU Budget: Challenges and Reform Proposals), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, 273. p.
6.1.6. Occasional Publications Gábor FÓTI – András INOTAI – Mihály SIMAI eds. Epochal Change in the World Economy. Past and Prospects Világgazdasági korszakváltás. Visszatekintés és távlatok Proceedings of the international conference devoted to the memory of Professor József Bognár: “Epoch Forming Changes in the World Economy in the Last Stage of the 20th Century and the Main Challenges of the New Era”, Institute for World Economics 22–23 February, 2007, Budapest. Budapest: IWE, 220 p. Gábor FÓTI – Tamás NOVÁK – Tamás SZEMLÉR eds. Európa peremén: új tagok és szomszédok. (Kelet-Európa Tanulmányok, 1.) (On the Outskirts of Europe: New Members and Neighbours [East European Studies, Vol. 1]), Budapest: IWE, 206. p. Tamás NOVÁK – Judit SZILÁGYI eds. EU-bővítés: csatlakozási hatások, társadalmi felelősségvállalás. (Kelet-Európa Tanulmányok, 2.). (EU Enlargement: Effects of Accession and Social Responsibility [East European Studies, Vol. 2]), Budapest: IWE, 118 p.
34
The Institute’s Publications in 2007
Gábor TÚRY – Krisztina VIDA eds. Monitoring jelentés 2007. Összehasonlító monitoring jelentés a 2004-ben az Európai Unióhoz csatlakozott nyolcak integrációs teljesítményéről (Monitoring Report 2007. Comparative Monitoring Report on the Integration Performance of Eight New Member States Joining the EU in 2004), Budapest: IWE, 81 p.
Staff Members’ Publications in 2007
35
6.2. Publications by IWE Staff Members in 2007 (titles in the language of publications)
Annamária ARTNER ‘Egy békétlen világ felé. Foglalkoztatási viszonyok és társadalmi egyensúly’ (Toward a Restless World. Employment Conditions and Social Equilibrium) in P. Bajomi-Lázár ed., Annual 2006, Budapest: Zsigmond Király Főiskola, pp. 11–25. ‘EU Cohesion Policy and New Governance – the Example of the Baltic States’ in Kálmán Dezséri ed., New Modes of Governance and the EU Structural and Cohesion Policy in the New Member States, Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, pp. 113–154. ‘Globalizáció alulnézetből’ (Globalization from the Worm’s-eye View), Erdélyi Report, No. 6, p. 10. ‘Gondolatok a magyar foglalkoztatási helyzetről’ (Some Thoughts about Hungarian Employment Situation), Egyenlítő, No. 5, pp. 23–25. ‘Az ír foglalkoztatáspolitika fő vonalai napjainkban’ (Outline of Irish Employment Policy Today), Munkaügyi Szemle, No. 5, pp. 39–41. ‘A Licence for Plundering? Is the West Taking Over the East?’ in Quo vadis Europa?: Errwege und Auswege, Stuttgart: Attac EU–AG Stuttgart, pp. 32–39. ‘A mi bőrünkre’ (It Costs Our Skin), Népszabadság, 29 March. ‘A nemzetközi tőkemozgás és a nemzetközi versenyképesség meghatározó tényezői, várható változásai’ (Major Factors of International Capital Flows and International Competitiveness, Their Likely Changes) in Péter Farkas – Gábor Fóti eds., Magyarország globális környezete 2020-ig. (Háttértanulmányok a magyar külstratégiához, 1.) (The Global Environment of Hungary till 2020 [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 1]), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, pp. 80–98. ‘A növekedés ára – az ír foglalkoztatási viszonyok’ (The Price of Growth – Irish Employment Conditions), Statisztikai Szemle, No. 6, pp. 485–506. ‘Növekedés és társadalmi igazságosság, újraelosztás (a szociális biztonság)’ (Growth and Social Justice, Redistribution [Social Security]) in Gábor Fóti – Tamás Novák eds., A gazdasági biztonság kihívásai. (Háttértanulmányok a magyar külstratégiához, 2.). (Challenges of Economic Security [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 2]), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, pp. 37–53. ‘Globalizáció – antiglobalizáció’ (Globalization – Antiglobalization), Egyenlítő, No. 12, pp. 17–19.
36
Staff Members' Publications in 2007
‘Globalizáció alulnézetben: Elnyomott csoportok – lázadó mozgalmak’ Beszélgetés Artner Annamária könyvéről (Globaliztaion from the Worm’s-eye View: Oppressed Groups – Revolting Movements), Eszmélet, No. 75, pp. 129–145. ‘Az utóbbi évtizedek munkaerő-piaci trendjei az OECD-ben a statisztika tükrében’ (OECD Labour-market Trends of Recent Decades in the Light of Statistics) in Annamária Artner ed., A Gazdaság- és Vezetéstudományi Intézet évkönyve 2006. (Annual 2006 of the Institute of Economy and Management) Budapest: Zsigmond Király Főiskola, pp. 13–29. Annamári ARTNER – József CSELÉNYI – László CSER – Tamás FLEISCHER – – Béla ILLÉS – Attila JÓSZAI – János RECHNITZER – László VALTER ‘A Duna mint gazdasági tényező és erőforrás’ (The Danube as Economic Factor and Natural Resource) in Januszné Banczerowski – Piroska Szabó Baranyainé – István Koncz – József Szentpéteri – István Szemenyei eds., Stratégiai kutatások 2006–2007: Kutatási jelentések. (Strategic Researches 2006–2007: Research Reports), Budapest, Prime Minister’s Office – Hungarian Academy of Sciences, pp. 261–302. Kálmán DEZSÉRI ‘A csökkentett áfakulcsok és egyes áfaszabályok felülvizsgálata az EU-ban’ (Reduced VAT Rates and Certain VAT Rules Revised in the EU), Európai Tükör, No. 10, pp. 95–112. ‘New Modes of Governance and the EU Structural and Cohesion Policy in Slovenia’ in New Modes of Governance and the EU Structural and Cohesion Policy in the New Member States, Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, pp. 231–241. ‘New Modes of Governance and the EU Structural and Cohesion Policy in the New Member States’ in New Modes of Governance and the EU Structural and Cohesion Policy in the New Member States, Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, pp. 21–60. ‘Preface’ in New Modes of Governance and the EU Structural and Cohesion Policy in the New Member States, Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, pp. 13–20. Az áfarendszer felülvizsgálata az Európai Unióban (The Revision of the VAT System in the European Union), Vélemények, Kommentárok, Információk, No. 147, Budapest: IWE, 2 p. Rögös az út a reformszerződésig (Bumpy Is the Road to the Reform Treaty), Vélemények, Kommentárok, Információk, No. 149, Budapest: IWE, 2 p. Kálmán DEZSÉRI ed. New Modes of Governance and the EU Structural and Cohesion Policy in the New Member States, Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, 249 p.
Staff Members’ Publications in 2007
37
Péter FARKAS ‘Bognár József a globalizációról és egy új világgazdasági rendről’ (József Bognár on Globalization and on a New World Economic Order) in Gábor Fóti – András Inotai – Mihály Simai eds., Világgazdasági korszakváltás. Visszatekintés és távlatok (Epochal Change in the World Economy. Past and Prospects), Budapest: IWE, pp. 36–43. ‘A „fejlesztés-gazdaságtan” előretörése’ (The Advance of Development Economics) in Péter Farkas – Gábor Fóti eds., Magyarország globális környezete 2020-ig. (Háttértanulmányok a magyar külstratégiához, 1.) (The Global Environment of Hungary till 2020 [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 1]), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, pp. 236–250. ‘Ingatlan vagy ingó? Az amerikai ingatlanpiac és a világgazdaság’ (Stable or Unstable. The American Real Estate Market and the World Economy), Kézfogás, No. 10, pp. 9–10. ‘Középtávú világgazdasági prognózis. Meghatározó növekedési tényezők’ (Midterm World Economic Forecast. Decisive Growth Factors) in Péter Farkas – Gábor Fóti eds., Magyarország globális környezete 2020-ig. (Háttértanulmányok a magyar külstratégiához, 1.) (The Global Environment of Hungary till 2020 [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 1]), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, pp. 37–57. Gyengül a dollár világpénzszerepe (Dollar’s World-money Role Weakens), Vélemények, Kommentárok, Információk, No. 144, Budapest: IWE, 1 p. ‘A közgazdasági elméleti iskolák a foglalkoztatásról, különös tekintettel a globalizációra, 1.’ (Economic Theories on Employment, with Special Reference to Globalization), Munkaügyi Szemle, No. 10, pp. 27–31. ‘A közgazdasági elméleti iskolák a foglalkoztatásról, különös tekintettel a globalizációra, 2.’ (Economic Theories on Employment, with Special Reference to Globalization), Munkaügyi Szemle, No. 11, pp. 26–30. ‘Nyomor a világban, avagy 2-3 nap = 1 cunami: Jelenségek, okok, kiutak’ (Misery in the World or Two or Three Days Equals a Tsunami: Phenomena, Causes and the Ways Out), Kis Táska (ELTE TáTK – BCE TK), Vol. 4, No. 45, pp. 26–27. ‘Ötvenmillió éhhalál évente’ (Fifty Million Dead of Starvation Yearly), Népszabadság, 20 October, Supplement, p. 4. ‘Tények helyett makacs dolgok’ (Stern Things Instead of Facts), Magyar Narancs, Vol. 19, No. 17, p. 2. Ingatlan vagy ingó? Az amerikai ingatlanpiac és a világgazdaság (Stable or Unstable. The American Real Estate Market and the World Economy), Vélemények, Kommentárok, Információk, No. 148, Budapest: IWE, 2 p. Behind the Figures. The Main Foreign Trade-related Factors Affecting World Economic Growth since 1990, IWE Working Papers, No. 178, Budapest: IWE, 26 p.
38
Staff Members' Publications in 2007
Péter FARKAS – Gábor FÓTI eds. Magyarország globális környezete 2020-ig. (Háttértanulmányok a magyar külstratégiához, 1.) (The Global Environment of Hungary till 2020 [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 1]), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, 290 p. Tamás FLEISCHER ‘Fenntartható fejlődés: környezeti, társadalmi és gazdasági tényezők’ (Sustainable Development: Environmental, Social and Economic Factors) in Péter Farkas – Gábor Fóti eds., Magyarország globális környezete 2020-ig. (Háttértanulmányok a magyar külstratégiához, 1.) (The Global Environment of Hungary till 2020 [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 1]), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, pp. 192–202. ‘Környezeti biztonság’ (Environmental Security) in Gábor Fóti – Tamás Novák eds., A gazdasági biztonság kihívásai. (Háttértanulmányok a magyar külstratégiához, 2.) (Challenges of Economic Security [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 2]), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, pp. 120–134. ‘Logisztika – trendek és mítoszok: környezettudatos meggondolások a magyarországi logisztikai rendszer-elképzelésekről’ (Logistics: Trends and Myths; Environment Conscious Approach of Logistic System Plans), Közlekedéstudományi Szemle, Vol. 57, No. 2, pp. 51–57. ‘Transzeurópai folyosók: A meglévők hosszabbítgatása, vagy egy összeurópai hálózat kialakítása?’ (Trans-European Corridors: Extension of Existing Ones or Formulation of a PanEuropean Network?) in Ferenc Glatz ed., A Balkán és Magyarország: Váltás a külpolitikai gondolkodásban. (Magyarország az ezredfordulón – stratégia tanulmányok) (The Balkans and Hungary: Shift in Foreign Policy Thinking. [Hungary on the Turn of the Millenium – Strategic Studies]), Budapest: MTA Társadalomkutató Központ – Európa Intézet, pp. 365–379. Tamás FLEISCHER – Annamári ARTNER – József CSELÉNYI – László CSER – – Béla ILLÉS – Attila JÓSZAI – János RECHNITZER – László VALTER ‘A Duna mint gazdasági tényező és erőforrás’ (The Danube as Economic Factor and Natural Resource) in Januszné Banczerowski – Piroska Szabó Baranyainé – István Koncz – József Szentpéteri – István Szemenyei eds., Stratégiai kutatások 2006–2007: Kutatási jelentések (Strategic Researches 2006–2007: Research Reports), Budapest, MEH – MTA, pp. 261–302. Gábor FÓTI – Zsuzsa LUDVIG eds. The Ukrainian Economy in Europe, IWE Working Papers, No. 175, Budapest: IWE, 45 p.
Staff Members’ Publications in 2007
39
Gábor FÓTI – Péter FARKAS eds. Magyarország globális környezete 2020-ig (Háttértanulmányok a magyar külstratégiához, 1.) (The Global Environment of Hungary till 2020 [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 1]), Budapest : IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, 290 p. Gábor FÓTI – Tamás NOVÁK eds. A gazdasági biztonság kihívásai (Háttértanulmányok a magyar külstratégiához, 2.) (Challenges of Economic Security [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 2]), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, 201 p. Gábor FÓTI – Margit RÁCZ eds. Az Európai Unió előtt álló kihívásokról és a magyar érdekekről (Háttértanulmányok a magyar külstratégiához, 3.) (On the Challenges Facing the European Union and on the Hungarian Interests [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 3]), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, 240 p. Gábor FÓTI – András INOTAI – Mihály SIMAI eds. Epochal Change in the World Economy. Past and Prospects Világgazdasági korszakváltás. Visszatekintés és távlatok Proceedings of the international conference devoted to the memory of professor József Bognár: „Epoch Forming Changes in the World Economy in the Last Stage of the 20th Century and the Main Challenges of the New Era” Institute for World Economics 22–23 February, 2007, Budapest. Budapest: IWE, 220 p. Klára FÓTI ‘A magyar és az uniós munkaerőpiac összefüggései’ (Hungarian Labour Market within the Context of EU Membership) in Gábor Fóti – Margit Rácz eds., Az Európai Unió előtt álló kihívásokról és a magyar érdekekről. (Háttértanulmányok a magyar külstratégiához, 3.) (On the Challenges of the European Union and Hungarian Interests [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy, Vol. 3]), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, pp. 188–202. ‘Migration – Challenges and Opportunities in Central and Eastern Europe with Special Regard to Hungary (Some Possible Economic Impacts)’ in The Role of Human Capital in International Competitiveness. Transatlantic Comparison of Experience with Migration in the US and the EU. International Conference 26 January, 2007, Sofia. Sofia: Economic Policy Institute, pp. 49–66. Munkaügyi kapcsolatok. Jegyzet a LIGA Szakszervezetek által szervezett tanfolyam hallgatói számára (Labour Relations – Lecture Notes of Courses for Activists of the League for Independent Trade Unions), Budapest: LIGA, 44 p.
40
Staff Members' Publications in 2007
‘Népesedési folyamatok. A nemzetközi migráció fő jellemzői és a munkaerő-piaci problémák a világgazdaságban’ (Demographic Processes, Main Features of International Migration, and Labour Market Problems in World Economy) in Péter Farkas – Gábor Fóti eds., Magyarország globális környezete 2020-ig. (Háttértanulmányok a magyar külstratégiához, 1.) (The Global Environment of Hungary till 2020 [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 1]), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, pp. 165–178. ‘One Year of EU-membership: Impacts, Expectations, Challenges (the Case of Hungary)’ in Zubiri, I. ed., La ampliación al este de la Unión Europea, Madrid: Academia Europea de Ciencias y Artes, pp. 529–550. ‘Social-policy Dilemmas in Hungary within the Context of EU Membership: Some Problems of Poverty’, Hungarian Statistical Review, Special No. 11, pp. 24–42. András INOTAI ‘The Future of Europe – Seen from a New Member Country’ in Ivanka Petkova – Plamena Spassova eds., Summer Seminar for Young Public Servants. (Preparation for EU Accession – Summer Seminars 2006), Sofia: Economic Policy Institute, pp. 199–216. ‘Magyarország gazdasági fejlődése’ (The Economic Development of Hungary) in Rolf H. Hasse – Hermann Schneider – Klaus Weigelt eds., A szociális piacgazdaság lexikona. Gazdaságpolitika A-tól Z-ig. (Encyclopedia of Social Market Economy from A to Z), Budapest: Magyar Almanach Kiadó, Budapest, pp. 340–345. ‘Challenges to the Enlarged/Enlarging EU and the Financial Framework’ in Economic Policy Institute ed., Preparation for EU Accession – the Local Dimension. Sofia, pp. 85–100. ‘Reformok és társadalmi tudat’ (Reforms and Social Conscience), Köz-gazdaság, Vol. 2, No. 1, pp. 5–8. ‘Az MTA Világgazdasági Kutatóintézetének három évtizedes európai integrációs tevékenysége’ (The Three-decade-long Integration Acitivity of the Institute for World Economy of the HAS), in A VKI és az európai integrációs kutatások (IWE and the European Integration Research), Budapest: IWE, March 6, pp. 1–6. ‘Az Európai Unió a 21. században: globalizációs kihívások és integrációs dilemmák’ (The European Union in the 21st Century: Challenges of Globalization and Dilemmas of Integration) in A VKI és az európai integrációs kutatások (IWE and the European Integration Research), Budapest: IWE, March 6, pp. 7–10. ‘Gondolatok az Európai Unió délkelet-európai politikájának jövőjéről’ (Reflections on the Future of EU Policies in South-Eastern Europe’), Fejlesztés és Finanszírozás, No. 1, pp. 22–30. ‘Trade Surplus with Germany’, Business Hungary, April, p. 22. ‘Some Remarks on the Competitiveness of the Hungarian Economy in the Context of EU Membership and ooperation with International Capital’ in Proceedings of the conference „Comparing International Competitiveness of Manufacturing Companies in the EU with Special Em-
Staff Members’ Publications in 2007
41
phasis on Those in Central Eastern Europe.” Budapest: Ritsumeikan University and Institute for World Economics, pp. 166–169. Development, Features and Perspectives of Foreign Direct Investments in Southeastern European Countries: a Comparison of Central and Eastern European Experiences, Nase Gospoadrstvo (Maribor), No. 3–4, pp. 3–17. ‘Conditionality: the EU’s Key Approach’ in Johanna Deimel – Wim van Meurs eds., The Balkan Prism. A Retrospective by Policy-Makers and Analysts, München: Verlag Otto Sagner, pp. 415–428. ‘Der Donauraum – ein neues Wirtschaftszentrum in der erweiterten Europaeischen Union?’ Der Donauraum, No. 3–4, pp. 225–240. ‘Experiences and Lessons from the First Years of EU Membership – The Hungarian Case’ in Completing Eastern Enlargements. Effects on the Accession of Croatia, Proceedings of the Fourth International Conference, Pécs Initiative. Zagreb: Hanns-Seidel-Stiftung, pp. 22–36. ‘Experience with and Lessons from Three Years of EU Membership. General Features and Selected Hungarian Indicators’ in Summer Seminar for Young Public Servants, 12–17 June 2007, Albena resort, Varna, Sofia: Economic Policy Institute, pp. 277–295. ‘Javíthatja-e az európai részvénytársaság (Societas Europaea) Európa globális versenyképességét?’ (Does Societas Europaea Improve Europe’s Global Competitiveness), Európai Tükör, Vol. XII, No. 6, pp. 9–27. ‘Előszó a Magyar Európai Üzleti Tanács (HEBC) 2007. évi jelentéséhez’ (Foreword to the Annual Report 2007 of HEBC) in A felelősség közös. A Magyar Európai Üzleti Tanács jelentése (Common Responsibilities. The Report of the Hungarian European Business Council), Budapest, pp. 2. and 4. ‘Introductory Remarks’ in Gábor Fóti – András Inotai – Mihály Simai eds., Epochal Change in the World Economy. Past and Prospects. Világgazdasági korszakváltás. Visszatekintés és távlatok, Proceedings of the international conference devoted to the memory of professor József Bognár “Epoch Forming Changes in the World Economy in the Last Stage of the 20th Century and the Main Challenges of the New Era. Budapest.” 22–23 February 2007, Budapest: IWE, pp. 5–11. ‘Remarks on the Future Challenges of the European Union’ in Gábor Fóti – András Inotai – Mihály Simai eds., Epochal Change in the World Economy. Past and Prospects. Világgazdasági korszakváltás. Visszatekintés és távlatok, Proceedings of the international conference devoted to the memory of professor József Bognár “Epoch Forming Changes in the World Economy in the Last Stage of the 20th Century and the Main Challenges of the New Era. Budapest.” 22–23 February 2007, Budapest: IWE, pp. 91–107. ‘Experience with and Lessons from the First Years of EU Membership – The Hungarian Case’ Ikonomičeski Izsledovaniâ, No. 1, pp. 3–15. The European Union and Southeastern Europe. Troubled Waters Ahead? P.I.E. Peter Lang, Bruxelles, (“College of Europe Studies”, No. 7.), p. 414.
42
Staff Members' Publications in 2007
‘Erweiterungsmüdigkeit oder Reformunwilligkeit? Die EU zwischen globalen Herausforderungen und patriotischer Wirtschaftspolitik’ in Chaloupek, G. – Hein, E. – Truger, A. eds., Ende der Stagnation? Wirtschaftspolitische Perspektiven für mehr Wachstum und Beschäftigung in Europa (Reihe Wirtschaftswissenschaftliche Tagungen der AK Wien, Bd. 12.), Wien: Kammer für Arbeiter und Angestellte für Wien, pp. 79–98. ‘Reflections on the Future of the EU Budget, with Special Reference to the Position of the Net Beneficiary Countries’, Romanian Journal of European Affairs, Vol. 7, No. 3, pp. 5–22. ‘Trends in External Trade of the New Member Countries after Three Years of Membership with Special Reference to Their Intra-trade’, Hungarian Statistical Review, Special No. 11, pp. 43–74. ‘Facts and Driving Forces. Hungarian Direct Capital Exports on the Rise’, Business Hungary, Vol. 18, No. 9, pp. 5–6. ‘Remarks on the Future Challenges of the European Union’ in Richard Tilly – Paul J.J. Welfens – Michael Heise eds., 50 Years of EU Economic Dynamics. Integration, Financial Markets and Innovations, Springer Verlag, Berlin-Heidelberg, pp. 261–274. ‘Az Európai Unió és Kína gazdasági kapcsolatai’ (The Economic Contacts of the European Union and China), Külgazdaság, No. 11–12, pp. 4–37. ‘A világpolitikai és világgazdasági erőterek változása 2015–2020-ig’ (The Changes in the Fields of World Politics and World Economy until 2015–2020) in Péter Farkas – Gábor Fóti eds., Magyarország globális környezete 2020-ig. (Háttértanulmányok a magyar külstratégiához, 1.) (The Global Environment of Hungary till 2020 [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 1]), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, pp. 7–36. ‘A globális környezet középtávú előrejelzése’ (Összefoglaló tanulmány) (The Medium Term Forecast of Global Environment [A Summary Study]) in Péter Farkas – Gábor Fóti eds., Magyarország globális környezete 2020-ig. (Háttértanulmányok a magyar külstratégiához, 1.) (The Global Environment of Hungary till 2020 [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 1]), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, pp. 261–290. ‘A biztonság gazdasági vonatkozásai’ (Összefoglaló tanulmány) (The Economic Aspects of Security [A Summary Study]) in Gábor Fóti – Tamás Novák eds., A gazdasági biztonság kihívásai. (Háttértanulmányok a magyar külstratégiához, 2.) (Challenges of Economic Security [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 2]), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, pp. 152–201. ‘Gondolatok az Európai Unió költségvetésének jövőjéről és a magyar mozgástérről’ (Thoughts about the Future of the Expenditure of the European Union and the Hungarian Latitude) in Péter Balázs – Tamás Szemlér eds., EU-költségvetés: kihívások és reformtervek (EU Budget: Challenges and Reform Proposals), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, pp. 27– 48. ‘Can the European Company (Societas Europaea) Improve the Global Competitiveness of Europe?’, Európai Tükör, Selection of Studies published in the first half of 2007. Special Issue. pp. 57–76.
Staff Members’ Publications in 2007
43
‘EU Membership and Hungary’s Foreign Trade, with Special Regard to the New Member Countries’, Premium INSIDE, December 2007 – January 2008, No. 4, pp. 2–3. András INOTAI – Tamás SZEMLÉR ‘Az EU-költségvetés átfogó reformja. Közgazdasági alapok, politikai feltételek, tagállami érdekek, különös tekintettel Magyarország szempontjaira’ (The General Reform of the EU Budget. Economic Foundations, Political Conditions, Member State Interests, with Special Emphasis on Hungary’s Positions) in Stratégiai kutatások, 2006–2007: Kutatási jelentések (Strategic Researches, 2006–2007: Research Reports), Budapest: Prime Minister’s Office – Hungarian Academy of Sciences, pp. 201–219. András INOTAI – Ottó JUHÁSZ – Barna TÁLAS ‘Magyarország Kína-stratégiájának megalapozása’ (The Founding of Hungary’s China Strategy) in Stratégiai kutatások, 2006–2007: Kutatási jelentések (Strategic Researches, 2006–2007: Research Reports), Budapest: Prime Minister’s Office – Hungarian Academy of Sciences, pp. 171–200. Judit KISS ‘Development Policy Dilemmas in the European Union’, Development and Finance, No. 1, pp. 40–49. ‘Az EU-csatlakozás hatása a visegrádi országok agrárkereskedelmére’ (The Effect of EU Accession on the Visegrád Countries’ Agricultural Trade) in Tamás Novák – Judit Szilágyi eds., EU-bővítés: csatlakozási hatások, társadalmi felelősségvállalás. (Kelet-Európa Tanulmányok, 2007. 2.). (EU Enlargement: Effects of Accession and Social Responsibility [East European Studies, Vol. 2]), Budapest: IWE, pp. 7–55. ‘Az Európai Unió fejlesztéspolitikai dilemmái’ (Development Policy Dilemmas of the European Union), Fejlesztés és Finanszírozás, No. 1, pp. 40–49. ‘A „harmadik világ” felbomlásának következményei’ (The Consequences of the Dissulution of the “Third World”) in Péter Farkas – Gábor Fóti eds., Magyarország globális környezete 2020ig. (Háttértanulmányok a magyar külstratégiához, 1.) (The Global Environment of Hungary till 2020 [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 1]), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, pp. 58–66. ‘The Impact of EU Accession on the Agricultural Trade of the Visegrád Countries’, Hungarian Statistical Review, Special No. 11, pp. 93–116. A magyar nemzetközi fejlesztéspolitika a számok tükrében (Hungarian Development Policy in the Light of Figures), Budapest: HAND Szövetság, 34 p.
44
Staff Members' Publications in 2007
‘Remények és realitások: EU-csatlakozásunk agrár-külkereskedelmi hatása’ (Hopes and Realities: the Agricultural Foreign-trade Effect of Hungary’s EU Accession) in Agrárgazdaság, Vidékfejlesztés, Agrárinformatika, (Agrarian Economy, Rural Development, Agrarian Informatics), Nemzetközi Konferencia, Debrecen: Debreceni Egyetem, pp. 418–427. ‘Szertefoszló agrárremények, avagy EU-csatlakozásunk agrárkülkereskedelmi hatása’ (Dissolving Agricultural Hopes or else, the Agricultural Foreign-trade Effect of Hungary’s EU Accession), Köz-gazdaság, Tudományos Füzetek, Vol. 2, No. 3, pp. 17–20. Szertefoszló agrárremények, avagy EU-csatlakozásunk agrár-külkereskedelmi hatása (Dissolving Agricultural Hopes or else, the Agricultural Foreign-trade Effect of Hungary’s EU Accession), Kihívások, No. 188, Budapest: IWE, 8 p. ‘A világ áru- és szolgáltatáskereskedelmének várható alakulása’ (The Likely Developments of World Trade in Merchandise and Services) in Péter Farkas – Gábor Fóti eds., Magyarország globális környezete 2020-ig. (Háttértanulmányok a magyar külstratégiához, 1.) (The Global Environment of Hungary till 2020 [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 1]), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, pp. 67–79. ‘A világ mezőgazdasága a XXI. század első évtizedeiben’ (World Agriculture in the First Decades of the 21st Century) in Péter Farkas – Gábor Fóti eds., Magyarország globális környezete 2020-ig. (Háttértanulmányok a magyar külstratégiához, 1.) (The Global Environment of Hungary till 2020 [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 1]), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, pp. 128–144. ‘A világkereskedelem alakulásának hatása a magyar külgazdaságra’ (The Effect of World-trade Developments on Hungarian Economy), Külgazdaság, No. 5–6, pp. 40–48. Judit KISS – Tamás SZIGETVÁRI ‘A sikeres felzárkózás nemzetközi tapasztalatai’ (International Experiences of Successful Closing Up) in Péter Farkas – Gábor Fóti eds., Magyarország globális környezete 2020-ig. (Háttértanulmányok a magyar külstratégiához, 1.) (The Global Environment of Hungary till 2020 [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 1]), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, pp. 99–110. István KŐRÖSI ‘Az állam változó gazdasági szerepe és a humán tőke felértékelődése. Új korszakváltás a XXI. század elején?’ (The Changing Economic Role of the State and the Revaluation of the Human Capital. Epochal Change at the Beginning of the 21st Century) in Gábor Fóti – András Inotai – Mihály Simai eds., Világgazdasági korszakváltás. Visszatekintés és távlatok (Epochal Change in the World Economy. Past and Prospects), Budapest: IWE, pp. 108–125. Hanyatló állam – torz piac? (Az állam és a piac kapcsolata a XXI. századi Európában) (Declining State – Deformed Market? [Relations between State and Markets in 21st Century Europe]) in Katalin Botos – Klára Katona eds., Verseny és versenyképesség (Konferenciakötet, 2007.
Staff Members’ Publications in 2007
45
nov. 5.) (Competition and Competitiveness [A Conference Volume]), Budapest: Szent István Társulat, pp. 21–34. ‘A humán tőke felértékelődése és a lisszaboni stratégia’ (The Lisbon Strategy and the Role of Human Capital) in Péter Farkas – Gábor Fóti eds., Magyarország globális környezete 2020-ig. (Háttértanulmányok a magyar külstratégiához, 1.). (The Global Environment of Hungary till 2020 [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 1]), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, pp. 144–164. István KŐRÖSI – Katalin BOTOS Az Európai Unió a XXI. század elején (The European Union at the Beginning of the 21st Century), Budapest: PPCU, 214 p. Zsuzsa LUDVIG ‘Az EU–Oroszország energiadialógus’ (The Energy Dialogue of Russia and the EU), Közgazdaság, No. 2, pp. 41–66. ‘Integration Prospects for Ukraine: SES and/or »Deep Free Trade« with the EU?’ in Gábor Fóti – Zsuzsa Ludvig eds., The Ukrainian Economy in Europe. IWE Working Papers, No. 175, Budapest: IWE, pp. 42–45. ‘Ukrajna – a gazdaság kettős kötődésének dilemmája’ (Ukraine – the Dilemma of Dual Economic Attachment) in Tamás Novák – Tamás Szemlér eds., Európa peremén: új tagok és szomszédok. (Kelet-Európa Tanulmányok, 1.) (EU Enlargement: Effects of Accession and Social Responsibilitiy [East European Studies, Vol. 2]), Budapest: IWE, pp. 130–147. Zsuzsa LUDVIG – Csaba WEINER ‘Oroszország – erősödő gazdasági középhatalom vagy hollandkór az olajmezőkön?’ (Russia – Emerging Economic Middle Power or Dutch Disease in the Oil Fields?) Tamás Novák – Tamás Szemlér eds., Kelet-Európa Tanulmányok I. szám. Európa peremén: új tagok és szomszédok (On the Outskirts of Europe: New Members and Neighbours [East European Studies, Vol. 1]), Budapest: Institute for World Economics, pp. 178–199. Zsuzsa LUDVIG – Gábor FÓTI eds. The Ukrainian Economy in Europe, IWE Working Papers, No. 175, Budapest: IWE, 45 p.
46
Staff Members' Publications in 2007
Sándor MEISEL ‘Alternatives to Full EU Membership’ in Gábor Fóti – Zsuzsa Ludvig eds., The Ukrainian Economy in Europe, IWE Working Papers, No. 175. Budapest: IWE, pp. 39–41. ‘Az Európai Unió nemzetközi kereskedelmi konfliktusainak lehetséges területei’ in Gábor Fóti – Margit Rácz eds., Az Európai Unió előtt álló kihívásokról és a magyar érdekekről. (Háttértanulmányok a magyar külstratégiához, 3.), (On the Challenges Facing the European Union and on the Hungarian Interests [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 3]), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, pp. 9–22. ‘Az európai vállalat (Societas Europea) kialakulása’ (Development of the Idea of Societas Europaea), Vezetéstudomány, Vol. 38, No. 10, pp. 24–33. ‘The Experience of EU Membership – Two Years after Accession’ in Kerikmäe, Tanel – Kirch, Aksel – Talts, Mait eds., Europe – After Historical Enlargement: The Proceedings of the 5th Audentes Spring Conference 2006 and Other Papers on Europe’s Current Political, Legal, Economic and Social Affairs, Tallinn: Institute for European Studies, International University Audentes, pp. 126–151. ‘Lettország’ (Latvia) in Gábor Túry – Krisztina Vida eds., Monitoring Jelentés 2007. Összehasonlító monitoring jelentés a 2004-ben az Európai Unióhoz csatlakozott nyolcak integrációs teljesítményéről (Monitoring Report 2007. Comparative Monitoring Report on the Integration Performance of Eight New Member States Joining the EU in 2004), Budapest: IWE, pp. 20 – 27. ‘A teljes jogú uniós tagság alternatívái’ (Alternatives to Full EU Membership), Európai Tükör, No. 3, pp. 30–46. Klára MÉSZÁROS Világgazdaságtan (Egyetemi jegyzet) (World Economics [University Textbook]), Szeged: Szegedi Tuddomány Egyetem, 90 p. Éva NAGY – Zsuzsa DÖMÉNY ‘Egészségügyi rendszerek Latin-Amerikában’ (Health-care Systems in Latin America), Egyenlítő, No. 7–8, pp. 34–38. Tamás NOVÁK ‘Albánia – gyors növekedés kevés látható eredménnyel’ (Albania – Strong Economic Growth without Visible Results) in Tamás Novák – Tamás Szemlér eds., Európa peremén: új tagok és szomszédok (Kelet-Európa Tanulmányok, No. 1) (On the Outskirts of Europe: New Members and Neighbours [East European Studies, Vol. 1]), Budapest: IWE, pp. 73–84.
Staff Members’ Publications in 2007
47
‘A délkelet-európai országok EU-csatlakozási lehetőségei’ (The EU Accession Possibilities of Southeast European Countries) in Ferenc Glatz ed., A Balkán és Magyarország: váltás a külpolitikai gondolkodásban (Magyarország az ezredfordulón) (The Balkans and Hungary: Change in Foreign-political Thinking [Hungary at the Turn of the Millennium]), Budapest: MTA Társadalomkutató Központ – Európa Intézet, pp. 333–342. ‘Development of Small and Medium-sized Enterprises in Hungary’, Economic Studies, No. 1, Sofia: Institute of Economics at BAS, pp. 115–125 ‘Gazdasági növekedés és politikai stabilitás’ (Economic Growth and Political Stability) in Gábor Fóti – Tamás Novák eds., A gazdasági biztonság kihívásai (Challenges of Economic Security [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 2]), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, pp. 7–21. ‘Szerbia Montenegro nélkül – ördögi körben?’ (Serbia without Montenegro – in a Vicious Circle?) in Tamás Novák – Tamás Szemlér eds., Európa peremén: új tagok és szomszédok (On the Outskirts of Europe: New Members and Neighbours [East European Studies, Vol. 1]), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, pp. 114 –129. Tamás NOVÁK – András BAKÁCS – Gábor RÓBEL – Tamás SZEMLÉR – – András SZÉKELY-DOBY – Gábor TÚRY – Anna WISNIEWSKI ‘Az EU költségvetésének saját forrásai és az aktuális reformjavaslatok’ (Own Sources of EU Budget and Topical Reform Proposals) in Péter Balázs – Tamás Szemlér eds., EU-költségvetés: kihívások és reformtervek (EU Budget: Challenges and Reform Proposals), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, pp. 213–273. Tamás NOVÁK – Mojnir MRAK – Matija ROJEC – Tamás SZEMLÉR The Russian Economic Penetration in Montenegro. Briefing Paper for the European Parliament’s Committee on Foreign Affairs, No. PE 385.551, Brussels. Tamás NOVÁK – Marie-Janine CALIC – Dušan RELJIĆ – – Peter SCHMIDT – Tamás SZEMLÉR ‘The EU Presence in a Post-Status Kosovo: Challenges and Opportunities’, Südosteuropa, Vol. 55, No. 2–3, pp. 145–164. The EU Presence in a Post-Status Kosovo: Challenges and Opportunities, Briefing Paper for the European Parliament’s Committee on Foreign Affairs, No. PE 385.549, Brussels, http://www.swp-berlin.org/de/common/get_document.php?asset_id=4677, 23 p. Tamás NOVÁK – Péter GÁL – Csaba MOLDICZ ‘International Economic Boom, Stabilizing Hungarian Economy’, Development and Finance No. 3. pp. 88–96.
48
Staff Members' Publications in 2007
‘Iránykereső világgazdaság, lassuló magyar növekedés’ (Trend-seeking World Economy, Slowing Hungary), Az MFB Rt. Makrogazdasági elemzése (MFB Macroeconomic Analysis), Fejlesztés és Finanszírozás, No. 1. pp. 88–96. ‘Trend-seeking World Economy, Slowing Hungary’, MFB Macroeconomic Analysis, Development and Finance, No. 1, pp. 88–96. Tamás NOVÁK – Péter GÁL – Csaba MOLDICZ – Zsolt SZABÓ ‘Erős nemzetközi konjunktúra, stabilizálódó magyar gazdaság’ (International Boom, Stabilizing Hungarian Economy) Az MFB makrogazdasági elemzése (MFB Macroeconomic Analysis), Fejlesztés és Finanszírozás, No. 3, pp. 88–96. Tamás NOVÁK – Gábor FÓTI eds. A gazdasági biztonság kihívásai (Háttértanulmányok a magyar külstratégiához, 2.) (Challenges of Economic Security [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 2]), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, 201 p. Tamás NOVÁK – Gábor FÓTI – Tamás SZEMLÉR eds. Európa peremén: új tagok és szomszédok. (Kelet-Európa Tanulmányok, 1.) (On the Outskirts of Europe: New Members and Neighbours [East European Studies, Vol. 1]), Budapest: IWE, 206. p. Tamás NOVÁK – Judit SZILÁGYI eds. EU-bővítés: Csatlakozási hatások, társadalmi felelősségvállalás. (Kelet-Európa Tanulmányok, 2.). (EU Enlargement: Effects of Accession and Social Responsibility [East European Studies, Vol. 2]), Budapest: IWE, 118 p. Margit RÁCZ ‘Csatlakozás az euróövezethez, előfeltételek és következmények’ (Accession to Euro Area, Preconditions and Consequences) in Gábor Fóti – Margit Rácz eds., Az Európai Unió előtt álló kihívásokról és a magyar érdekekről. Háttértanulmányok a magyar külstratégiához, 3. (On the Challenges Facing the European Union and on the Hungarian Interests [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 3]), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, pp. 173–187. ‘Egység a sokrétűségben – integráció és tagállami érdekek az Európai Unióban’ (Unity in Diversity – Integation and Member States’ Interests in the European Union) in András Blahó ed., Európai integrációs alapismeretek. 5. kiadás (Bologna tankönyvsorozat), (Rudiments of European Integration), Budapest: Aula, pp. 61–69.
Staff Members’ Publications in 2007
49
‘Az egységes belső piac fejlődésének sajátosságai és problémái 2003-2006 között’ (Peculiarities and Problems of the Development of the Single Internal Market), Külgazdaság, No. 1–2, pp. 42–56. ‘Az EU egységes belső piacának fejlesztése, szerkezete és dinamikája, súlya a magyar gazdaságban’ (The Development, Structure and Dynamics of EU Single Internal Market and Its Significance in Hungarian Economy) in Gábor Fóti – Margit Rácz eds., Az Európai Unió előtt álló kihívásokról és a magyar érdekekről. (On the Challenges Facing the European Union and on the Hungarian Interests [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 3]), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, pp. 132–144. ‘Integrationsbarriere Heterogenität?’ in Schäfer, W. – Wass von Czege, Andreas eds., Das Gemeinsame Europa – viele Wege, kein Ziel? (Schriftenreihe des Europa-Kollegs Hamburg zur Integrationsforschung, 54.), Baden-Baden: Nomos, pp. 275–286. Uniós kihívások és válaszutak a 2000-es években: az egységes belső piac és a közös pénz (Challenges and Crossroads before the Union in the 2000s: the Single Internal Market and the Common Currency), Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, 199 p. Az első 50 év után: a német elnökséget záró EU-csúcsról (After the First 50 Years. On the EU Summit Closing German Presidency), Vélemények, Kommentárok, Információk, No. 145, Budapest: IWE, 2 p. Merre tovább Németország a CDU hannoveri kongresszusa után? (Where to Go Germany after the Hannover Congress of CDU?), Vélemények, Kommentárok, Információk, No. 151, Budapest: IWE, 2 p. Margit RÁCZ – Péter BALÁZS – Géza HETÉNYI – Tamás SZEMLÉR ‘Ötvenéves az európai integráció’ (The European Integration is Fifty Years Old), Heti Világgazdaság, No. 12, pp. 39–48. Margit RÁCZ – Gábor FÓTI eds., Az Európai Unió előtt álló kihívásokról és a magyar érdekekről (Háttértanulmányok a magyar külstratégiához, 3.) (On the Challenges Facing the European Union and on the Hungarian Interests [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 3]), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, 240 p. Mihály SIMAI ‘Az állam a XXI. században’ (The State in the 21st Century) in Péter Farkas – Gábor Fóti eds., Magyarország globális környezete 2020-ig (Háttértanulmányok a magyar külstratégiához, 1.) (The Global Environment of Hungary till 2020 [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 1]), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, pp. 203–214.
50
Staff Members' Publications in 2007
Bognár Józsefről és a korszakváltásról mai szemmel (On József Bognár and the Epochal Change as Seem Today) in Gábor Fóti – András Inotai – Mihály Simai eds., Világgazdasági korszakváltás. Visszatekintés és távlatok. Epochal Change in the World Economy. Past and Prospects, Budapest: IWE, pp. 12–20. ‘A globális élelmezési biztonság és az agrárszektor’ (Global Food Security and the Agrarian Sector), Élelmezési Ipar, No. 11, pp. 325–327. ‘Globalizáció és regionalizálódás a XXI. század elején’ (Globalization and Regionalization at the Beginning of the 21st Centrury) in András Blahó ed., Európai integrációs alapismeretek (Basic Knowledge of European Integration), Budapest: Aula, pp. 43–58. ‘The Human Dimension of the Global Development Process in the Early Part of the Twentyfirst Century: Critical Trends and New Challenges’ in George Mavrotas – Anthony Shorrocks eds., Advancing Development: Core Themes in Global Economics, New York: Palgrave– Macmillan, pp. 686–711. ‘A multilaterális együttműködés a XXI. században’ (Multilateral Cooperation in the 21st Century) in Péter Farkas – Gábor Fóti eds., Magyarország globális környezete 2020-ig (Háttértanulmányok a magyar külstratégiához, 1.) (The Global Environment of Hungary till 2020 [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 1]), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, pp. 251–260. ‘Poverty and Inequality in Eastern Europe and the CIS Transition Economies’ in Jomo K. S – Jacques Baudot eds., Flat World, Big Gaps: Economic Liberalization, Globalization, Poverty and Inequality, New Delhi, New York, London: Orient Longman, Zed Books, Third World Network. Published in association with the United Nations, pp. 216–241. ‘A távlatok: kitekintés a XXI. század következő évtizedeire’ (Outlook: Prospects to the Coming Decades of the 21st Century) in Gábor Fóti – András Inotai – Mihály Simai eds., Világgazdasági korszakváltás. Visszatekintés és távlatok. Epochal Change in the World Economy. Past and Prospects, Budapest: IWE, pp. 44–56. ‘A világ és az EU a XXI. század göröngyös útjain’ (The World and the EU on the Bumpy Roads of the 21st Century), Magyar Tudomány, No. 9, pp. 1130–1135. A világgazdaság a XXI. század forgatagában. Új trendek és stratégiák (World Economy in the Whirlpool of the 21st Century. New Trends and Strategies), Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, 426 p. Miklós SOMAI ‘The Hungarian Countryside in 2015’ in Slovenia and Hungary as Partners in the Processes of National and European Socioeconomic Development, (1st International Scientific Meeting), Maribor, Slovenia, pp. 143–156.
Staff Members’ Publications in 2007
51
’A világ mezőgazdasága és az agrártermékek világkereskedelme’ (World Agriculture and the World Trade of Agrarian Products) in Gábor Fóti – Margit Rácz eds., Az Európai Unió előtt álló kihívásokról és a magyar érdekekről (Háttértanulmányok a magyar külstratégiához, 3.) (On the Challenges Facing the European Union and on the Hungarian Interests [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 3]), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, pp. 72–87. Andrea SZALAVETZ ‘An Atypical Relation between Structural Change and Changes in Labour Input: Hungary in an International Comparison’ Hungarian Statistical Review, Special No. 11, pp. 24–42. ‘Bound to Grow through Knowledge Accumulation and Networking’ in Piech Krzysztof ed., Knowledge and Innovation Processes in Central and Eastern European Economies. Warsaw: The Knowledge and Innovation Institute, pp. 341–356. Changing National Innovation Systems in Advanced Economies – Lessons for Catching-up Follower Countries, Ikonomičeski Izsledovaniâ, No. 1, pp. 66–76. ‘Klaszterek Írországban’ (Clusters in Ireland), Fejlesztés és Finanszírozás. (Development and Finance), No. 4, pp. 13–21. ‘Műszaki fejlődés és tőkeintenzitás’ (Technical Change and Capital Intensity), Közgazdasági Szemle, No. 2, pp. 184–198. ‘Műszaki fejlődés, szerkezetátalakulás és munkaintenzitás’ (Technical Progress, Structural Change, and Labour-intensity), Külgazdaság, No. 7–8, pp. 4–17. ‘Regime Transformation as a Choice among Capitalist Model Elements – the Eexample of Hungary’ in Piasecki, R. ed., Transition of Central European Economies and Enterprises. Lodz: Spoleczna Wyzsza Szkola Przedsiebiorczosci I Zarzadzania, pp. 49–65. ‘Structural Transformation of the Capital Stock and Capital-saving Technical Change’, Acta Oeconomica, No. 3, pp. 263–279. ‘The Technical Progress Perspective of European Integration’ in Gábor Fóti – András Inotai – Mihály Simai eds., Világgazdasági korszakváltás. Visszatekintés és távlatok. Epochai Change in the World Economy Past and Prospects, Budapest: IWE, pp. 133–136. ‘A technológiai fejlődés fő területei és gazdasági, társadalmi következményei’ (Major Fields of Technological Development and Their Economic, Social Consequences) in Péter Farkas – Gábor Fóti eds., Magyarország globális környezete 2020-ig (Háttértanulmányok a magyar külstratégiához, 1.) (The Global Environment of Hungary till 2020 [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 1]), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, pp. 179–191. ‘Multinationals and Technology Transfer – A Hungarian View’ in Comparing International Competitiveness of Manufacturing Companies in the EU with Special Emphasis on those in Central Eastern Europe, Conference Proceedings, Ritsumeikan University – IWE, pp. 84–90.
52
Staff Members' Publications in 2007
Miklós SZANYI ‘Competitiveness and Industrial Renewal through International Production Relocation’ in Cs. Makó – H. Moerel – M. Illésy – P. Csizmadia eds, Working it out? The Labour Process and Employment Relations in the New Economy (Globalisation and Labour), Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, pp. 85–106. ‘Az európai vállalat: működés és környezet’ (Societas Europea: Functioning and Environment), Európai Tükör, No. 7–8, pp. 59–74. ‘A közép-kelet-európai országok ipari struktúrájának változása: középpontban az elektromos ipar’ (The Industrial-structure Change of the East Central European Countries. The Electronic Industry in the Centre), in Ogawa, Eiji ed., Gazdasági integráció (Európai Uniós Tanulmányok, 2.). Tokyo: Hitotsubashi University, pp. 181–211. Külföldi befektetésekre alapozott fejlődési modell a XXI. század elején Magyarországon (Foreign-investment-based Development Model in Hungary at the Beginning of the 21st Century), Műhelytanulmányok, No. 76, Budapest: IWE, 55 p. Magyar csempe, román csapágy; elmélkedés átalakuló országok egymás közötti tőkebefektetéseiről (Hungarian Tiles, Romanian Ball Bearings; Meditating on the Investment Activities of Transition Countries among One Another), Kihívások, No. 190, Budapest: IWE, 12 p. ‘A nemzetállamokon túllépő vállalati stratégiák növekvő szerepe a világgazdaságban’ (The Growing Role of Company Strategies over Nation States in the World Economy) in Péter Farkas – Gábor Fóti eds., Magyarország globális környezete 2020-ig (Háttértanulmányok a magyar külstratégiához, 1.) (The Global Environment of Hungary till 2020 [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 1]), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, pp. 111–127. Európai Részvénytársaság: működés és környezet (The Operation and Environment Societas Europea), CD-ROM, Allianz Hungária Biztosító Zrt. Budapest. The European Public Limited-Liability Company: Operation and Environment. CD-ROM Allianz Hungaria Ltd. Budapest, 2007 Together with Research Collaborators: CEE-Cluster Network. Summary of the Main Research Results, ICEG Working Paper, No. 34, July 2. Miklós SZANYI – Yusaf AKBAR – András BAKÁCS – – Sándor BUZÁS – Zoltán POGÁTSA – Magdolna SASS CEE-Cluster Network: Summary of the Main Research Results, Kinga Endrész ed., Budapest, ICEG European Center. (Working Paper No. 34.). 26 p. http://icegec.hu/eng/publications/_docs/wp/wp34.pdf
Staff Members’ Publications in 2007
53
Tamás SZEMLÉR ‘Bosznia-Hercegovina – kényszermegoldásból életképes önálló állam?’ (Bosnia-Herzegovina: from a Compulsory Settlement to a Viable Independent State?) in Gábor Fóti – Tamás Novák – Tamás Szemlér eds., Európa peremén: új tagok és szomszédok (Kelet-Európa Tanulmányok, 1.) (On the Outskirts of Europe: New Members and Neighbours [East European Studies, Vol. 1]), Budapest: IWE, pp. 85–96. ‘Függelék’ (Supplement) in Gábor Fóti – Tamás Novák – Tamás Szemlér eds., Európa peremén: új tagok és szomszédok (Kelet-Európa Tanulmányok, 1.) (On the Outskirts of Europe: New Members and Neighbours [East European Studies, Vol.1]), Budapest: IWE, pp. 200–206. ‘Searching for Balanced Growth: Regional Policy in Hungary before and after EU Accession’ in Nikolov, Krassimir Y. ed., Adapting to Integration in an Enlarged European Union, Sofia: Bulgarian European Community Studies Association (BECSA). ‘Az EU- és a magyar költségvetés kapcsolatai, a kohéziós politika alakulása’ (Relations between the EU- and the Hungarian Budget, Trends in Cohesion Policy) in Gábor Fóti – Margit Rácz eds., Az Európai Unió előtt álló kihívásokról és a magyar érdekekről (Háttértanulmányok a magyar külstratégiához, 3.) (On the Challenges Facing the European Union and on the Hungarian Interests [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 3]), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, pp. 59–71. ‘Mid-term Economic Programmes and the Use of EU Funds in Hungary’, Ikonomičeski Izsledvaniâ, No. 1, pp. 33–43. Tamás SZEMLÉR – András INOTAI ‘Az EU-költségvetés átfogó reformja. Közgazdasági alapok, politikai feltételek, tagállami érdekek, különös tekintettel Magyarország szempontjaira’ (The General Reform of the EU Budget. Economic Foundations, Political Conditions, Member State Interests, with Special Emphasis on Hungary’s Positions) in Stratégiai kutatások, 2006-2007: Kutatási jelentések (Research Results, 2006–2007: Research Reports), Budapest: Prime Minister’s Office – Hungarian Acedemy of Sciences, pp. 201–219. Tamás SZEMLÉR – Péter BALÁZS – Géza HETÉNYI – Margit RÁCZ ‘Ötvenéves az európai integráció’ (The European Integration is Fifty Years Old), Heti Világgazdaság, No. 12, pp. 39–48. Tamás SZEMLÉR– András BAKÁCS – Tamás NOVÁK – Gábor RÓBEL – – András SZÉKELY-DOBY – Gábor TÚRY – Anna WISNIEWSKI ‘Az EU költségvetésének saját forrásai és az aktuális reformjavaslatok’ (Own Sources of EU Budget and Topical Reform Proposals) in Péter Balázs – Tamás Szemlér eds., EU-költségvetés: kihívások és reformtervek (EU Budget: Challenges and Reform Proposals), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, pp. 213–273.
54
Staff Members' Publications in 2007
Tamás SZEMLÉR– Mojnir MRAK – Tamás NOVÁK – Matija ROJEC The Russian Economic Penetration in Montenegro. Briefing Paper for the European Parliament’s Committee on Foreign Affairs, No. PE 385.551, Brussels. Tamás SZEMLÉR – Tamás NOVÁK – Marie-Janine CALIC – – Dušan RELJIĆ – Peter SCHMIDT ‘The EU Presence in a Post-Status Kosovo: Challenges and Opportunities’, Südosteuropa, Vol. 55, No. 2–3, pp. 145–164. The EU Presence in a Post-Status Kosovo: Challenges and Opportunities, Briefing Paper for the European Parliament’s Committee on Foreign Affairs, No. PE 385.549, Brussels, http://www.swp-berlin.org/de/common/get_document.php?asset_id=4677, 23 p. Tamás SZEMLÉR – Tamás NOVÁK eds. Európa peremén: új tagok és szomszédok (Kelet-Európa Tanulmányok, 1.) (On the Outskirts of Europe: New Members and Neighbours [East European Studies, Vol. 1]), Budapest: IWE, 206. p. Tamás SZEMLÉR – Péter BALÁZS eds. EU-költségvetés: kihívások és reformtervek (EU Budget: Challenges and Reform Proposals), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, 273. p. András SZÉKELY-DOBY ‘Foreign Investment and Economic Catching up: The Case of Hungary’, Ikonomičeski Izsledvaniâ. No. 1, pp. 55–65. ‘Gazdasági elmaradottság a globalizálódó világban: az indiai út’ (Economic Underdevelopment in the World of Globalization: the Indian Way) in Margit Balogh ed., Diszciplínák határain innen és túl. (Fiatal kutatók fóruma, 2 – 2006) (Forum of Young Researchers). Budapest: MTA Társadalomkutató Központ, pp. 465–482. ‘A gazdasági rendszerek és a globalizáció’ (Economic Systems and the Globalization) in Katalin Szabó ed., Összehasonlító gazdaságtan (Comparative Economics). Budapest: Aula, pp. 283–309. ‘A piac által vezérelt vegyes gazdaság modellje. Az Egyesült Államok példája’ (Mixed Economy Model Driven by the Market. The Example of the United States) in Katalin Szabó ed., Összehasonlító gazdaságtan (Comparative Economics), Budapest: Aula, pp. 79–102.
Staff Members’ Publications in 2007
55
‘Románia az Európai Unióban – gazdasági helyzetkép’ (Romania in the European Union – Economic General Survey) in Gábor Fóti – Tamás Novák – Tamás Szemlér eds., Európa peremén: új tagok és szomszédok (On the Outskirts of Europe: New Members and Neighbours [East European Studies, Vol. 1]), Budapest: IWE, pp. 23–35. András SZÉKELY-DOBY – András BAKÁCS – Tamás NOVÁK – Gábor RÓBEL – – Tamás SZEMLÉR – Gábor TÚRY – Anna WISNIEWSKI ‘Az EU költségvetésének saját forrásai és az aktuális reformjavaslatok’ (Own Sources of EU Budget and Topical Reform Proposals) in Péter Balázs – Tamás Szemlér eds., EU-költségvetés: kihívások és reformtervek (EU Budget: Challenges and Reform Proposals), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, pp. 213–273. Tamás SZIGETVÁRI ‘Verseny és finanszírozás az olasz közúti infrastruktúrában’ (Competition and Financing in Italian Road Infrastructure), Fejlesztés és Finanszírozás (Development and Finance), No. 1, pp. 50–60. ‘Törökország – félhold a csillagok között’ (Turkey – Crescend among the Stars) in Gábor Fóti – Tamás Novák – Tamás Szemlér eds., Európa peremén: új tagok és szomszédok (Kelet-Európa Tanulmányok, 1.) (On the Outskirts of Europe: New Members and Neighbours [East European Studies, Vol. 1]), Budapest: IWE, pp. 53–72. ‘Hungarian Economic Relations with the Arab World’, Hungarian Statistical Review, Special No. 11, pp. 117 –135. ‘Az Európai Unió további bővítése és a magyar külstratégia lehetőségei’ (Further Enlargement Possibilities of the EU and the Possibilities of Hungarian Foreign Strategy) in Tamás Novák– Judit Szilágyi eds., EU-bővítés: csatlakozási hatások, társadalmi felelősségvállalás (KeletEurópa Tanulmányok, 2.) (EU Enlargement: Effects of Accession and Social Responsibility [East European Studies, Vol. 2]), Budapest, IWE, pp. 56–83. ‘A sikeres felzárkózás nemzetközi tapasztalatai’ (International Experiences of Successful Closing Up) in Péter Farkas – Gábor Fóti eds., Magyarország globális környezete 2020-ig (Háttértanulmányok a magyar külstratégiához, 1.) (The Global Environment of Hungary till 2020 [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 1), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, pp. 99–110. Törökországi választások. Maradnak az iszlamisták (Turkish Elections. Islamists Stay), Vélemények, Kommentárok, Információk, No. 146, Budapest: IWE, 2 p.
56
Staff Members' Publications in 2007
Judit SZILÁGYI ‘Észtország’ (Eastonia) in Gábor Túry – Krisztina Vida eds., Monitoring jelentés 2007. Összehasonlító monitoring jelentés a 2004-ben az Európai Unióhoz csatlakozott nyolcak integrációs teljesítményéről (Monitoring Report 2007. Comparative Monitoring Report on the Integration Performance of Eight New Member States Joining the EU in 2004), Budapest: IWE, pp. 13 – 19. ‘Észtország az Európai Unióban’ (Estonia in the European Union) in Margit Balogh ed., Diszciplínák határain innen és túl. (Fiatal kutatók fóruma) (Forum of Young Researchers), Budapest: MTA Társadalomkutató Központ, pp. 483–502. ‘Az Európai Unió világpolitikai szerepe, a közös kül- és biztonságpolitika kilátásai’ (The Global Role of the European Union, the Prospects of the Common Foreign and Security Policies) in Gábor Fóti – Margit Rácz eds., Az Európai Unió előtt álló kihívásokról és a magyar érdekekről (Háttértanulmányok a magyar külstratégiához, 3.) (On the Challenges Facing the European Union and on the Hungarian Interests [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 3]), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, pp. 23–38. ‘The Feasibility of the Hungarian Convergence Programme’, Ikonomičeski Izsledovaniâ, No. 1, pp. 44–54. ‘Macedónia – megérdemelten az EU kapujában?’ (Macedonia – Deservedly at the Gate of the EU?) in Gábor Fóti – Tamás Novák – Tamás Szemlér eds., Európa peremén: új tagok és szomszédok (On the Outskirts of Europe: New Members and Neighbours [East European Studies, Vol. 1], Budapest: IWE, pp. 97–113. Gábor TÚRY ‘Bulgária – gyors uniós tagság, lassú felzárkózás’ (Bulgaria – Sudden Membership, Slow Closing Up) in Gábor Fóti – Tamás Novák – Tamás Szemlér eds., Európa peremén: új tagok és szomszédok (On the Outskirts of Europe: New Members and Neighbours [East European Studies, Vol. 1]), Budapest: IWE, pp.7–22. ‘Csehország’ (Czech Republic) in Gábor Túry – Krisztina Vida eds., Monitoring jelentés 2007. Összehasonlító monitoring jelentés a 2004-ben az Európai Unióhoz csatlakozott nyolcak integrációs teljesítményéről (Monitoring Report 2007. Comparative Monitoring Report on the Integration Performance of Eight New Member States Joining the EU in 2004), Budapest: IWE, pp. 6 –12. ‘Szlovákia’ (Slovak Republic) in Gábor Túry – Krisztina Vida eds., Monitoring jelentés 2007. Összehasonlító monitoring jelentés a 2004-ben az Európai Unióhoz csatlakozott nyolcak integrációs teljesítményéről (Monitoring Report 2007. Comparative Monitoring Report on the Integration Performance of Eight New Member States Joining the EU in 2004), Budapest: IWE, pp. 51 –56. ‘Regional Disparities during the Transition: The New Spatial Structure in Hungary’, Inokonomičski Izsledovaniâ, No. 1, pp. 98–110.
Staff Members’ Publications in 2007
57
Gábor TÚRY– András BAKÁCS – Tamás NOVÁK – Gábor RÓBEL – – Tamás SZEMLÉR – András SZÉKELY-DOBY – Anna WISNIEWSKI ‘Az EU költségvetésének saját forrásai és az aktuális reformjavaslatok’ (Own Sources of EU Budget and Topical Reform Proposals) in Péter Balázs – Tamás Szemlér eds., EU-költségvetés: kihívások és reformtervek (EU Budget: Challenges and Reform Proposals), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, pp. 213–273. Gábor TÚRY - Krisztina VIDA eds. Monitoring jelentés 2007. Összehasonlító monitoring jelentés a 2004-ben az Európai Unióhoz csatlakozott nyolcak integrációs teljesítményéről (Monitoring Report 2007. Comparative Monitoring Report on the Integration Performance of Eight New Member States Joining the EU in 2004), Budapest: IWE, 81 p. Krisztina VIDA ‘Az integrációs modell kérdései. A lehetséges forgatókönyvek és Magyarország’ (Questions of the Integration Model. Possible Scenarios and Hungary) in Gábor Fóti – Margit Rácz eds., Az Európai Unió előtt álló kihívásokról és a magyar érdekekről (Háttértanulmányok a magyar külstratégiához, 3.) (On the Challenges Facing the European Union and on the Hungarian Interests [Background Studies to Hungarian Foreign Strategy. Vol. 3]), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, pp. 225–234. ‘New Modes of Governance in EU Cohesion Policy – Emergence, Evolution, Eevaluation’ in Kálmán Dezséri ed., New Modes of Governance and the EU Structural and Cohesion Policy in the New Member States, Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, pp. 87–112. ‘Összefoglaló’ (Summary) in Gábor Túry – Krisztina Vida eds., Monitoring jelentés 2007. Összehasonlító monitoring jelentés a 2004-ben az Európai Unióhoz csatlakozott nyolcak integrációs teljesítményéről (Monitoring Report 2007. Comparative Monitoring Report on the Integration Performance of Eight New Member States Joining the EU in 2004), Budapest: IWE, pp. 64–73. Laekentől Lisszabonig – az alkotmányozási kísérlettől a reformszerződésig (From Laeken to Lisbon – from the Constitutional Trial to the Reform Treaty), Vélemények, Kommentárok, Információk, No. 152, Budapest: IWE, 2 p. Krisztina VIDA – Kálmán DEZSÉRI New Modes of Governance in the EU Structural and Cohesion Policy and the Case of the New Member States: Integrated project: Priority 7 – Citizens and Governance in the Knowledgebased Society. NEWGOV Working Papers, 26 p. http://www.eunewgov.org/database/DELIV/D01D48%20_WP_Structural_and_Cohesion_Policy.pdf
58
Staff Members' Publications in 2007
Krisztina VIDA – Tamás SZŰCS eds. ‘Az európai integráció története’ (History of European Integration) in Tamás Kende – Tamás Szűcs – Petra Jeney eds., Európai közjog és politika, Budapest: Complex Kiadó, pp. 33 –103. Krisztina VIDA – Gábor TÚRY eds. Monitoring jelentés 2007. Összehasonlító monitoring jelentés a 2004-ben az Európai Unióhoz csatlakozott nyolcak integrációs teljesítményéről (Monitoring Report 2007. Comparative Monitoring Report on the Integration Performance of Eight New Member States Joining the EU in 2004), Budapest Institute for World Economics, 81 p. Csaba WEINER Rövid helyzetkép Oroszországról a 2000-es évek közepén (Brief General Survey of Russia in the Middle of the 2000s), Vélemények, Kommentárok, Információk, No. 142, Budapest: IWE, 2 p. Beszámoló Litvánia harmadik uniós évéről (2006. május 1. – 2007. április 30.) (Report on the Third Year of Lithuania in the European Union, May 1 2006 – April 30 2007), Kihívások, No. 189, Budapest: IWE, 24 p. ‘Litvánia’ (Lithuania) in Gábor Túry – Krisztina Vida eds., Monitoring Jelentés 2007. Összehasonlító monitoring jelentés a 2004-ben az Európai Unióhoz csatlakozott nyolcak integrációs teljesítményéről (Monitoring Report 2007. Comparative Monitoring Report on the Integration Performance of the Eight New Member States that Joining the EU in 2004), Budapest: IWE, pp. 35–42. ‘Belarusz – Lukasenka és Putyin szorításában?’ (Belarus – Pressing between Lukashenka and Putin?) Tamás Novák – Tamás Szemlér eds., Kelet-Európa Tanulmányok I. szám. Európa peremén: új tagok és szomszédok (On the Outskirts of Europe: New Members and Neighbours [East European Studies, Vol. 1]), Budapest: Institute for World Economics, pp. 148–166. Csaba WEINER – Zsuzsa LUDVIG ‘Oroszország – erősödő gazdasági középhatalom vagy hollandkór az olajmezőkön?’ (Russia – Emerging Economic Middle Power or Dutch Disease in Oil Fields?) Tamás Novák – Tamás Szemlér eds., Európa peremén: új tagok és szomszédok (On the Outskirts of Europe: New Members and Neighbours [East European Studies, Vol. 1]), Budapest: Institute for World Economics, pp. 178–199. Anna WISNIEWSKI ‘Futball-Eb és euróbevezetés’ (Soccer European Championship and Euro Introduction), Figyelő, No. 26, 20. p.
Staff Members’ Publications in 2007
59
‘Lengyelország’ (Poland) in Gábor Túry – Krisztina Vida eds., Monitoring Jelentés 2007. Összehasonlító monitoring jelentés a 2004-ben az Európai Unióhoz csatlakozott nyolcak integrációs teljesítményéről (Monitoring Report 2007. Comparative Monitoring Report on the Integration Performance of Eight New Member States Joining the EU in 2004), Budapest: IWE, pp. 20 –27. ‘New Modes of Governance and the EU Structural and Cohesion Funds in Poland’ in Krisztina Vida – Kálmán Dezséri eds., New Modes of Governance in the EU Structural and Cohesion Policy and the Case of the New Member States, Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, pp. 183–212. ‘Varsói Rubicon: Előrehozott lengyel választások’ (The Warsaw Rubicon: Premature Polish Elections), Figyelő, No. 37, pp. 30–31. ‘A világgazdasági nyitottság és a biztonság (az értékesítési biztonság)’ (World Economic Openness and Security [Security of Realization]) in Gábor Fóti – Tamás Novák – Tamás Szemlér eds., Európa peremén: új tagok és szomszédok (On the Outskirts of Europe: New Members and Neighbours [East European Studies, Vol. 1]), Budapest: IWE, pp. 22–36. ‘European Integration, Regional Structural Change and Cohesion in Poland’ in Christiane Krieger-Boden – Edgar Morgenroth – George Petrakos eds., The Impact of European Integration on Regional Structural Change and Cohesion, Routledge: Economics. Gazdaságpolitika a lengyel választások után (Economic Policy after the Elections), Vélemények, Kommentárok, Információk, No. 150, Budapest: IWE, 2 p. Anna WISNIEWSKI – András BAKÁCS – Tamás NOVÁK – Gábor RÓBEL – – Tamás SZEMLÉR – András SZÉKELY-DOBY – Gábor TÚRY ‘Az EU költségvetésének saját forrásai és az aktuális reformjavaslatok’ (Own Sources of EU Budget and Topical Reform Proposals) in Péter Balázs – Tamás Szemlér eds., EU-költségvetés: kihívások és reformtervek (EU Budget: Challenges and Reform Proposals), Budapest: IWE – Center for EU Enlargement Studies, pp. 213–273.
Lectures Abroad or at International Conferences in Hungary
60
7. Lectures Delivered Abroad or at International Conferences Held in Hungary (ITALICIZED TITLES IN THE LANGUAGE OF THE LECTURE) Annamária ARTNER Is the West Taking Over The East? lecture in the conference “Global EU or Waterloo: Dream or Nightmare in the East?” organized by Attac Germany, Stuttgart, 30–31 March. Expectations in Hungary (and in CEE in General) to a »Social Europe«, presentation at the international workshop “What Does a Social Europe Look Like?” organized by Danish Daily Newspaper Information and the Educational Association (DEO), Copenhagen, Denmark, 28 August. Tamás FLEISCHER Sustainable and Liveable Cities – a Vision, Preparation of the Green Paper of Urban Transport, Third Technical Workshop on “Public Transport, Intermodality and Intelligent Transport”, organised by EU DG TREN and REC, Szentendre, Hungary, 7 March. A nemzetgazdaság és a közlekedés kölcsönhatása (Mutual Effects of National Economy and Transportation), Közlekedéstudományi Egyesület, Magyar Mérnöki Kamara, Magyar Útügyi Társaság, “Az államreform és a közlekedésfejlesztés aktuális kérdései” (The Topical Issues of Reforming the State and Developing Transport), Balatonföldvár, Hungary, 8 May. Klára FÓTI Migration – Challenges and Opportunities in Central and Eastern Europe with Special Regard to Hungary (Some Possible Economic Impacts). “The Role of Human Capital in International Competitiveness. Transatlantic Comparison of Experience with Migration in the US and the EU”, International Conference, Economic Policy Institute, Sofia, Bulgaria, 26 January. Migration Trends in Hungary (lecture at the section on international migration), Economic Forum, Krynica, Poland, 7 September. Relationship between Demographic Developments and Immigration in Central and Eastern Europe, bilateral Romanian–Hungarian roundtable conference, Bucharest, Romania, 17 November.
Lectures Abroad or at International Conferences in Hungary
61
Illegal Foreign Employment in Hungary and Its Policy Implications, lecture at the conference organised by the Economic Policy Institute, Sofia, Bulgaria, 10–13 December. András INOTAI Human Resources, Sustainable Growth and Migration. Role of Human Capital in International Competitiveness. Transatlantic Comparison of Experience with Migration in the US and in the EU, EPI–IWE–German Marshall Fund conference, Sofia, Bulgaria, 26 January. Versenyképes-e még az Európai Unió és Magyarország? (Are the European Union and Hungary Still Competitive?), International Institute of Research, Novotel, Budapest, Hungary, 30 January. Hungary’s Experience with Membership in the European Union, with Special Attention to Trade, FDI, Competitiveness and Innovation, bilateral conference between the Institute of Economic Forecasting (Kiev) and IWE, financed by the Ukrainian Ministry of Finance, Kijev, Ukraine, 1 February. Global Challenges, European Dilemmas, Proceedings of the international conference devoted to the memory of professor József Bognár: “Epoch Forming Changes in the World Economy in the Last Stage of the 20th Century and the Main Challenges of the New Era”, IWE, Budapest, Hungary, 22–23 February. Geopolitical Consequences of EU Enlargement, Budapest, CEU (CEU–FES conference), Budapest, Hungary, 24 February. Hungary’s EU Accession and Competitiveness in Regional Comparison, Japanese Investments in Different European Countries, IWE, Budapest, Hungary, 24 February. Economic Features of the European Integration: Global Challenges, Community-level Tasks and Impacts of Enlargement, Diplomatic Institute, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Sofia, Bulgaria, 9 March. The European Union: Enormous Economic Success – Problematic Political and Social Structure, Diplomatic Institute, CEI, Hanns-Seidel Foundation, Sandanski, Bulgaria, 13 March. Competitiveness and EU Membership, Diplomatic Academy, Zagreb, Croatia, 28 March. Foreign Direct Investment from the Host Country Perspective, Diplomatic Academy, Zagreb, Croatia, 29 March. Reflections on the Future of the European Union, with Special Regard to Enlargement, European Online Academy, Brussels, Belgium, 22 April. Europa – global player der Weltwirtschaft? “Vision und Wirklihckeit. Die Zukunft Europas” series (Weidenfeld, Busek, Kohn-Bendit), München, Münchner Volkshochschule, Gasteig, Germany, 15 May.
62
Lectures Abroad or at International Conferences in Hungary
The Lisbon Agenda and the New Member Countries, Zentrum für Europaeische Integration (ZEI) master course, Bonn, Germany, 29–30 May. Transformation, European Integration, Globalization: An East-Central European Balance, lecture held to students of University of Florida, IWE, Budapest, Hungary, 31 May. Black Sea Region and the Euroean Union: the Economic Dimension, “The Collaboration of the Black Sea from the View of the Countries of the Danube Region”, an international conference, IDM, Vienna, Austria, 1 June. The Enlarged European Union between Global Challenges and European Chances, summer seminar for young public servants from Southeastern Europe, Albena (Varna), Bulgaria, 16 June. Experience of New Member Countries – Three Years after Accession to the EU, Forum Ost– West, Hotel Ambassador, Bern, Switzerland, 29 June. The European Union in the Globalizing Environment: Uncertain Values? Unclear Mission? Lack of Leadership? Jean Monnet EFRI Summer School 2007, Rijeka, Croatia, 5 July. Experience with the Enlargement in 2004. The Hungarian Case, Jean Monnet EFRI Summer School 2007, Rijeka, Croatia, 5 July. Central Europe’s Current and Future Position in the International Division of Labour, 3rd annual Marcus Evans Conferences, “Leveraging Strategic Opportunities in Low Cost Countries”, Sofitel, Budapest, Hungary, 3 September. Felkészülés és tapasztalatok az EU-tagsággal kapcsolatban (Preparations and Experiences in Connection with EU Membership), magyar–ukrán kormányközi egyezményen alapuló bilaterális konferencia „Stabilizáció, konszolidáció, növekedés. Magyar tapasztalatok, tanulságok Ukrajna számára” címmel, Hotel Hélia, Budapest, Hungary, 17 September. Economic Consequences of EU-Membership for Hungary, FES–IWE–AIIS workshop (roadshow conferences), Tirana, Albania, 24 September. Europe and the Global Challenges, Audentes International University, Tallinn, Estonia, 25 September. Transformación económica e integración europea. Experiencias de Hungría en comparación regional, lecture held to Mexican university students, IWE, Budapest, Hungary, 4 October. Economic Assessment after Hungarian Accession to the EU, Hanns-Seidel-Stiftung and Diplomatic Academy of Croatia, Dubrovnik, Croatia, 10 October. Buchpraesentation (The EU and Southeastern Europe), Diplomatische Akademie, Vienna, Austria, 12 October. Wirtschaft – Politik – Sicherheit – Recht: Zwischen Anpassung und Mitgestaltung in der europaeischen Arena, Diplomatische Akademie, Vienna, Austria, 12 October.
Lectures Abroad or at International Conferences in Hungary
63
Hungarian Transformation and European Integration in Regional Comparison, lecture held to students from the University of Florida, MTA Kongresszusi Terem, Budapest, Hungary, 16 October. Hungary: Political, Economic and Social Considerations, Swedish Parliament, Swedish– Hungarian Friendly Society, Stockholm, Sweden, 17 October. Hungary and the EU: Accession Experience, with Special Reference to EU Transfers, Sweden, SIEPS, Stockholm, 18 October. Europe and the Globalizing World: Opportunities and Threats, SITE lunch seminars, Stockholm, Sweden, 18 October. Introduction to the course “Impact of EU Enlargement”, College of Europe, Bruges, Belgium, 24 October. The New Member States: Challenges and Opportunities, “Macroeconomic Framework and Corporate Development.” Hungarian–Bulgarian bilateral workshop, IWE, Budapest, Hungary, 26 October. Economic Security in Our Age, Romanian–Hungarian bilateral roundtable, Bucharest, Romania, 16 November. Future of European Integration and the New Member States, European Institute of Romania, Hotel Hilton, Bucharest, Romania, 16 November. Post-Accession Challenges and Opportunities: Experience of Hungary, Romanian Academy, National Institute of Economic Research, Institute for Economic Forecasting, Bucharest, Romania, 17 November. Introductary Lecture, The European Union as a Global Economic Actor kurzus, College of Europe, Warsaw, Poland, 19 November. The European Union and Global Challenges, “European Dream. Promises and Reality” conference (Gorbachev Foundation), Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest, Hungary, 28 November. The European Union: Strong and Weak Factors in a Changing World, Hungarian–Russian bilateral roundtable, Történettudományi Intézet, Budapest, Hungary, 30 November. Main Tendencies in International Migration and Its Impact on the Sending Countries, First International Workshop on “Implication of EU Membership on Immigration Trends and Immigrant Integration. Policies for the Bulgarian Labour Market”, a GMF-sponsored project, Sofia, Bulgaria, 10 December. Globalization, Eurpean Integration and National Modernization: Expectations, Fears and Realities Facing European Societies, Bulgarian European Community Studies Association with TEPSA, Sofia, Bulgaria, 14 December.
64
Lectures Abroad or at International Conferences in Hungary
Judit KISS Impact of Hungarian EU Accession on Its Agricultural Foreign Trade, “International Conference on Agricultural Economics, Rural Development and Informatics”, Debrecen, Hungary, 20–21 March. Increasing Efficiency and Output in the Agricultural Sector with Reference to the Use of Technology to Increase Yields, 3rd EU–DPRK Economic Workshop, Pyongyang, DPR Korea, 23–24 October. A magyar nemzetközi fejlesztéspolitika a számok tükrében (The Hungarian International Development Policy Reflected by Data), International Aid Watch Conference, Budapest, Hungary, 18 October. World Economic Situation of Africa (Does Development Assistance Really Help?), “Szegénységcsökkentési programok Afrikában – A 10. Európai Fejlesztési Alap hasznosítása” an international conference, Gödöllő, Hungary, 9–11 November. István KŐRÖSI The Changing Economic Role of the State and the Revaluation of the Human Capital, Proceedings of the international conference devoted to the memory of professor József Bognár: “Epoch Forming Changes in the World Economy in the Last Stage of the 20th Century and the Main Challenges of the New Era”, IWE, Budapest, Hungary, 22–23 February. The Social Market Economy – Past, Present and Future, at the Conference of German– Hungarian Forum, Budapest, Hungary, 23 November. The Transformation Processes in the Economy of Middle-East Europe, at the international seminar “Middle-East Europe 1989–2007” of the Andrassy University, Budapest, Hungary, 30 November. Tamás NOVÁK Hungarian FDI in Eastern Europe, “Hungarian multinationals 2007”, Organised by Develor, Budapest, Hungary, 6 June. Hungarian Macroeconomic Situation, Hungarian–Bulgarian bilateral workshop organised by IWE, Budapest, Hungary, 26 October. Economic Impacts of Romanian and Bulgarian Accession, worksop organised within the framework of EU Consent, Budapest, Hungary, November. Hungarian Capital Exports, “Capital Export: a Chance or a Necessity?” organised by the Hungarian Business Alliance of Foreign and Domestic Investors, Budapest, Hungary, November.
Lectures Abroad or at International Conferences in Hungary
65
Capital Exports and Ethnic Hungarians, “Ethnic Hungarians in the 21st Century”, organised by the Offices of the President of Hungary, Budapest, Hungary, 30 November. Mihály SIMAI Developing Countries and Global Challenges in the 21st Century, World Conference of International Sciences, Chicago, USA, 12 February. UN Forum: Global Inequalities and World Economy, United Nations, New York, USA, 18 February. The Answers of Universal Churches to Global Changes in the 21st Century, US Institute of Peace, Washington, USA, 21 February. The United States and the European Union, Warsaw University, Warsaw, Poland, 14 March. The Transition to Knowledge-based Society and the Former Socialist Coutnries, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia, 18 April. The Interrelationship between World Politics and World Economy, Maastricht University, Maastricht, the Netherlands, 22 Octóber. Global Transformation and the Balkans, Friedrich Ebert Stiftung–UNDP, Skopje, Macedonia, 24 November. Miklós SOMAI How the Hungarian Countryside Could Be Better to Live in? a common conference of Hungarian research institutes for social sciences, Budapest, Hungary, September. The Hungarian Countryside in 2015, an international scientific meeting, “Slovenia and Hungary as Partners in the Processes of National and European Socioeconomic Development”, Maribor, Slovenia, 19–20 October. Wealth Tax: Pros and Cons, “Macroeconomic Framework and Corporate Development”, Hungarian–Bulgarian bilateral workshop, Institute for World Economics, Budapest, Hungary, 26– 27 October. Andrea SZALAVETZ Technological Leaders and Followers: Capital-saving Technical Change in the Fifth Kondratieff Long Wave, lecture presented at The Freeman Seminar Series seminar, Brighton, England, 3 February.
66
Lectures Abroad or at International Conferences in Hungary
The Technical Progress Perspective of European Integration, Proceedings of the international conference devoted to the memory of professor József Bognár: “Epoch Forming Changes in the World Economy in the Last Stage of the 20th Century and the Main Challenges of the New Era”, IWE, Budapest, Hungary, 22–23 February. Multinationals and Technology Transfer – A Hungarian View, RITS–IWE, Budapest, Hungary, 24 February. Understanding the Relationship between Knowledge and Competitiveness in the Enlarging EU, an official discussant to three lectures, Ljubljana, Bosnia-Herzegovina, 26–28 September. Impact of Technical Change on Labour Inputs – Hungary in an International Comparison, international scientific meeting, “Slovenia and Hungary as Partners in the Processes of National and European Socioeconomic Development”, Maribor, Slovenia, 19–20 October. Knowledge-based Eentrepreneurship in Hungary, the 8th Hungarian–Romanian Bilateral Round Table, Bucharest, Romania, 16–17 November. Miklós SZANYI Structural Change, Competitiveness and Foreign Investments in Transition Economies of Central Europe. The Case of Electrical Industry, 3rd International Workshop of Joint Research Study Group “EU Economy” of EUIJ Tokyo Consortium, Tokyo, Japan, 25 March. Cluster Concept and Practice in Hungary, “The Impact of FDI on Growth and Employment in the New EU Member States”, Faculty of European Studies, Babes-Boyai University and IWE, Kolozsvár, Romania, 5–6 October. Cluster Concept and Practice in Hungary, Slovenian–Hungarian roundtable conference, University of Economics, Maribor, Slovenia, 19–20 October. Tamás SZEMLÉR Reform Programmes to Support Innovations and Progressive Restructuring in the Hungarian Economy, Ukrainian–Hungarian seminar on „Innovative measurements of market reforms: Ukrainian strategy and Hungarian experience”, Institute of Economic Forecast, Kiev, Ukraine, 31 January – 1 February. Dublin? Lisbon? Maastricht? EU-related Mid-term Reform Programmes in Hungary, WIIW– IWE bilateral seminar, Wiener Institut für Internationale Wirtschaftsvergleiche, Vienna, Austria, 7 May. Economic Consequences of EU Membership for Hungary, workshop “The State of the European Union and the Accession Perspectives of Macedonia” organised by the Friedrich-EbertStiftung, the Institute for World Economics of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences and the Institute for Democracy “Societas Civilis”, Hotel Holiday Inn, Skopje, Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, 10 May.
Lectures Abroad or at International Conferences in Hungary
67
Economic Consequences of EU Membership for Hungary, workshop organised by the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, the Institute for World Economics of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences and the Directorate for European Integration (Sarajevo), Unitic Conference Center, Sarajevo, Bosnia-Herzegovina, 6 June. EU Financial Support for the Western Balkans: Well-suited to Real Needs?, “A Roadmap for the Western-Balkans: Using IPA and Other EU Funds to Accelerate Convergence and Integration”, workshop organised by the Center for EU Enlargement Studies, Central European University (Budapest), Open Society Institute Brussels, Brussels, Belgium, 11 October. Sunny Days or Foggy Prospects? Some Thoughts about the Future of the EU, Danube Conference of Junior Chamber International, Visegrád, Hungary, 13 October. EU Financial Support for the Western Balkans: Well-suited to Real Needs? “The Western Balkans and Turkey: Progress and Prospects” workshop organised by the Trans European Policy Studies Association (TEPSA), La Fondation Universitaire, Brussels, Belgium, 13 December. The EU Presence in a Post-status Kosovo: Challenges and Opportunities, public hearing at the European Parliament’s Committee on Foreign Affairs, Brussels, Belgium, 18 December. András SZÉKELY-DOBY Foreign Investments and Economic Catching Up: The Case of Hungary, international scientific meeting, “Slovenia and Hungary as Partners in the Processes of National and European Socioeconomic Development”, Maribor, Slovenia, 19–20 October. The Dark Side of the Growth. Environmental Challenges in China, 8th Hungarian – Romanian Bilateral Round Table, Bucharest, Romania, 16–17 November. Gábor TÚRY Regional Development – The Strategic Goal of the New Hungary Development Plan, IWE– WIIW Bilateral Workshop, Vienna, Austria, 7 May. Components of the Sustainable Regional Development in the National Development Plan of Hungary, international conference, “The Impact of FDI on Growth and Employment in the New EU Member States”, Kolozsvár, Romania, 5–6 October. Regional Development and Regional Policy in Hungary in the Last 15 Years, international scientific meeting, “Slovenia and Hungary as partners in the processes of national and European socioeconomic development”, Maribor, Slovenia, 19–20 October Regional Inequalities – the Case of Hungary, “Macroeconomic Framework and Corporate Development”, 5th Hungarian–Bulgarian bilateral workshop, Budapest, Hungary, 26–27 October.
68
Lectures Abroad or at International Conferences in Hungary
Regional Inequalities – the Case of Hungary, 8th Hungarian – Romanian Bilateral Round Table, Bucharest, Romania, 16–17 November. Krisztina VIDA New Modes of Governance in the New Member States – the Case of Cohesion Policy, NEWGOV Consortium Meeting, Florence, Italy, 31 May – 1 June. Anna WISNIEWSKI Nominal and Real Convergence in the NMSs, presentation held at the IWE–WIIW workshop, Vienna, Austria, 7 May. Poland and the Lisbon Process, presentation held at the ISES summer university international relations course, Kőszeg ISES, Hungary, 5 July. CEE Facing the Challenge of EU Membership, a course held at the ISES international relations MA programme, Kőszeg ISES, Hungary, 19–22 November.
The Institute’s International Conferences
8. International Conferences Organized by IWE in 2007 February 22–23
“Epoch Forming Changes in the World Economy in the Last Stage of the 20th Century and the Main Challenges of the New Era” international conference organized to pay tribute to the memory of Professor József Bognár, the founder and first director of the Institute for World Economics, Budapest.
February 24
“Comparing International Competitiveness of Manufacturing Companies in the EU with Special Emphasis on Those in Central Eastern Europe”, international conference co-organized with the Ritsumeikan University, Japan.
May 31
“The Political and Economic Transition in Hungary and the Crucial Issues of the Hungarian Economy”, a conference for MBA students of the Arizona State University.
September 17–18
“Stabilization, Consolidation and Growth – Hungarian Experiences for Ukraine”, Hungarian–Ukrainian intergovernmental conference Budapest.
October 4
“Hungarian Transformation and European Integration. Hungarian Experiences in Regional Comparison”, conference for students of the Instituto Technológico de Monterrey, Mexico.
October 14–20
Organization of the 2007 Master of Arts in International Business Seminar in Hungary for the Students of Florida State University, Budapest.
October 26
“Microeconomic Framework and Corporate Development”, Hungarian–Bulgarian bilateral Workshop, co-organized with the Institute of Economic Policy, Sofia.
69
Foreign Guests at IWE
70
9. Foreign Guests at IWE in 2007 ALBU, Lucian Liviu
Institute of Economic Forecasting, Romanian Academy of Sciences, Bucharest, Romania
BARANOVSKY, O.
Institute of Economics and Forecasting, Kiev, Ukraine
BELKA, Marek
United Nations, Economic Commission for Europe, Geneva, Switzerland
BJÖRNER, Cecilia
Embassy of Sweden, Budapest, Hungary
BODROV, Volodimir
Scientific Institute of Financial Research, Kiev, Ukraine
BOGOMOLOV, Oleg T.
Institute of Economics, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia
BRIMBLE, Atchaka S.
Ministry of Industry, Office of Industrial Economics, Thailand
BUSS, Hans-Volker
Unilever Ltd, Budapest, Hungary
CAMPOBASSO, Corrado
ISDEE (Istituto di Studi e Documentazione sull’Europa, Comunitaria e l’Europa Orientale), Trieste, Italy
CHIPEV, Plamen
Institute of Economics, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Sofia, Bulgaria
CLAPHAM, Ronald
Universität Siegen, Germany
DANILENKO, Anatolij
Institute of Economics and Forecasting, Kiev, Ukraine
DIMITROVA, Diana
Institute of Economics, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Sofia, Bulgaria
DONGYAO, Zhou
Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, Beijing, China
ECKHOLT, Edgard
Embassy of Chile, Budapest, Hungary
EHRKE, Michael
Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, Budapest, Hungary
Foreign Guests at IWE
71
FLOHR, Herbert
Handelskammer, Hamburg, Germany
FRÖHLICH, Helgard
European Online Academy, Berlin, Germany
GOLEBIOWSKI, Janusz
Warsaw School of Economics, Poland
GOMEZ, Alejandro
Embassy of Mexico, Budapest, Hungary
GRICENKO, Andrij
National Bank of Ukraine, Kiev, Ukraine
HASANOV, Serkij
National Economic and Financial University, Kiev, Ukraine
HEIKKILÄ, Tuomo
Government Institute for Economic Research, Helsinki, Finland
HEYETS, Valerij
Institute of Economics and Forecasting, Kiev, Ukraine
HOYER, Werner
Bundestag, FDP Fraktion, Berlin, Germany
IARA, Anna
The Vienna Institute for Comparative Economic Studies, Vienna, Austria
IGOREVNA, Darja
Institute of Economics, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia
IKEMOTO, Shuichi
Nihon University, Tokyo, Japan
INABA, Kazuo
Ritsumeikan University, Japan
IYEMOTO, Hiroshi
Nagoya Gakuin University, Japan
JEFIMENKO, Tatjana
Ministry of Finances, Ukraine
JINDRA, Bjoern
Halle Institute for Economic Research, Germany
KAISER, Hans
Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung, Budapest, Hungary
KARLSLAND, Anders
Embassy of Sweden, Budapest, Hungary
KAUFMANN, Hugo
New York University, USA
KUDRJASHOV, Vasil
Scientific Institute of Financial Research, Kiev, Ukraine
LABOUVERIE, Pierre
Embassy of Belgium, Budapest, Hungary
Foreign Guests at IWE
72 LEE, Suk
Korea Institute for National Unification, Seoul, Korea
MARHOLD, Hartmut
European Online Academy, Berlin, Germany
MINTCHEV, Vesselin
Institute of Economics, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Sofia, Bulgaria
MONICH, Jurij
Embassy of Russia, Budapest, Hungary
MUNTIYAN, Valerij
Ministry of Economics, Kiev, Ukraine
NOVICKI, Valerij
Institute of International Relations and World Economy, Kiev, Ukraine
ONEASCU, Iulian
European Institute, Bucharest, Romania
OPPENLÄNDER, K.H.
IFO Institute, München, Germany
PAVLINEK, Petr
University of Nebraska, USA
PETKOVA, Ivanka
Economic Policy Institute, Sofia, Bulgaria
PISANI_FERRY, Jean
BRUEGEL, Brussels, Belgium
ROLLO, Jim
European Studies Institute, Sussex, Great Britain
SALAMIN, Marc-André
Embassy of Switzerland, Budapest, Hungary
SARIISKI, Grigor
Institute of Economics, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Sofia, Bulgaria
SCHIFF, Hans Peter
Embassy of Germany, Budapest, Hungary
SELUDKO, Natalia
Institute of Economics and Forecasting, Kiev, Ukraine
SHAOJIE, Li
Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, Beijing, China
SIDENKO, Volodimir
Institute for Economics and Forecasting, Kiev, Ukraine
Von SOLEMACHER, Hans-Friedrich Von SYDOW, Björn
Hanns-Seidel-Stiftung, Budapest, Hungary Swedish Research Council, Stockholm, Sweden
Foreign Guests at IWE
73
TAKAHASHI, Koji
Embassy of Japan, Budapest, Hungary
TANAKA, Hiroshi
Ritsumeikan University, Japan
TOTEV, Stoyan
Institute of Economics, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Sofia, Bulgaria
TURTOI, Crina
Institute of Agricultural Economics, Romanian Academy of Sciences, Bucharest, Romania
VALLS, Liuis
Ritsumeikan University, Japan
VOLOTOV, Sergei
Institute of Economics, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia
VISHNEVSKY, Valentin
Institute of Economics and Forecasting, Kiev, Ukraine
XIPU, Ma
Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, Beijing, China
YASEN, Grigoriev
Institute of Economics, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Sofia, Bulgaria
YEGOROV, Valentin
Postgraduate Trianing Institute of the National and Financial University, Kiev, Ukraine
ZHALILO, Jaroslav
National Institute of Strategic Research, Kiev, Ukraine
Appendix
74
Appendix The Advisory Board of the Institute for World Economics
Ferenc Bartha President Trigránit Development Corporation
Erhard Busek President Institute for the Danube Region Vienna
Hans Volker Buss Former Managing Director Unilever Hungary
Szabolcs Fazakas Former Minister of Industry and Trade
Árpád Göncz Former President of the Hungarian Republic
Péter Hegedűs President Hungarian EU Enlargement Business Council
Franz Kaps Advisor, Office of the World Bank, Europe and Central Asia Regional Office, Hungary
Tibor Palánkai Professor, Director, Center for European Studies and Ecudation, Budapest University of Economic Sciences and Public Administration
Zsuzsa Pásztor Former General Director HUNGEXPO Rt.
Mihály Patai President, General Director Allianz–Hungária Insurance Co.
György Szapáry Vice-President National Bank of Hungary
Ádám Török Professor Budapest University of Technology and Economics
Tibor Vámos Professor, Chairman of Board of the Computer and Automation Research Institute
Appendix
75
The Research Council of the Institute for World Economics
Éva Ehrlich Research director
Annamária Kovács Chief librarian
Klára Fóti Senior research fellow
Tamás Novák Research director
András Hernádi Research director
Margit Rácz Research director
András Inotai General director Judit Kiss Research director
Mihály Simai Research professor Tamás Szemlér Senior research fellow