Product details
- Categories: Economic and Monetary Affairs
- Publisher: PALGRAVE-MACMILLAN
- ISBN: 9780230298682
- Publication Date: 10/02/2012
- Binding: Hardback
- Number of pages: 256
- Language: English
Summary
In 2000, the European Union set out to shape itself into the world's "most dynamic and competitive knowledge-based economy" within a decade. But how great is the capacity of the EU to orchestrate 'competitiveness'? Can common policy instruments produce consistent effects across diverse varieties of capitalism? Has substantial policy learning taken place in response to the successes and failures of the Lisbon agenda? Europe and National Economic Transformation identifies the nature and limits of the transformative capacities of the EU's push for economic gains. The book does so by examining the consequences of the decade-long Lisbon process and its successor, Europe 2020. It explores a broad range of economic outcomes and consequences for an array of policy areas, including innovation financing, employment services, labor migration policy and pension reform.
Table of contents
Introduction: Evaluating the Lisbon Process, a Soft Approach to Hard Objectives; M.P.Smith
PART I: LISBON, 'COMPETITIVENESS' AND NATIONAL MACROECONOMIC PERFORMANCE
Evaluating the Performance Record under the Lisbon Agenda; D.L.Cleeton
Innovation and Competition in the EU15: Empirical Evidence on the Lisbon Decade and Beyond; M.Ugur & U.Guner
PART II: LISBON AND NATIONAL MODELS OF CAPITALISM
European Integration, Social Protection, and the Lisbon Agenda; A.M.van der Veen & C.S.Allen
Innovation Financing in Europe: What has Financial Market Integration Brought?; R.Deeg
Lisbon and 'Better Regulation': Implications for National Regulatory Governance; M.P.Smith
PART III: LISBON, LABOR AND EMPLOYMENT
The Transformation of Public Employment Services During the Lisbon Decade; W.Schelkle, D.Mabbett, & M.Freier
Adapting Pension Policy to meet the Lisbon Strategy's Goals; P.Kostadinova
Re-Discovering Migration as a Strategy for Human Resources: Employers and the Rhetorical Claims of Competitiveness during the Lisbon Era; G.Menz
Conclusion: Does Europe 2020 represent learning from the Lisbon strategy?; R.Vilpišauskas