Innovation in Hungary - The Impact of EU Accession and Integration into Global Value Chains

This paper argues that EU accession has brought about minimal changes in the patterns of innovation in Hungary. The reason why is not that the ‘EU factor’ is of minor importance; rather, it is Hungary's inability to use EU resources effectively, so as to fully benefit from EU membership. The Hu...

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Main Author: Szalavetz Andrea
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2014-11-01
Series:International Journal of Management and Economics
Subjects:
o38
r58
e65
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/ijme-2014-0042
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spelling doaj-39252b6c0b5f419aabdf096182be5b322021-09-05T21:02:05ZengSciendoInternational Journal of Management and Economics2299-97012014-11-01421405910.2478/ijme-2014-0042ijme-2014-0042Innovation in Hungary - The Impact of EU Accession and Integration into Global Value ChainsSzalavetz Andrea0Institute of World Economics, MTA KRTK, Hungarian Academy of SciencesThis paper argues that EU accession has brought about minimal changes in the patterns of innovation in Hungary. The reason why is not that the ‘EU factor’ is of minor importance; rather, it is Hungary's inability to use EU resources effectively, so as to fully benefit from EU membership. The Hungarian story also demonstrates that the EU cannot block member states from reversing reform or abusing the opportunities EU membership offers to them. We contend that globalization (global value chain integration) has more effectively contributed to Hungary's knowledge-based upgrading than Europeanization (in the sense of policy transfer; access to EU Structural & Cohesion Funds, and integration in the European Research Area). This argument is substantiated with a case study on innovation strategy design and implementation, which illustrates the ambiguous impact of Europeanization, which is contrasted with our investigation of integration in global value chains, conducted through interviews of foreign-owned manufacturing companies about their R&D-based upgrading experience.https://doi.org/10.2478/ijme-2014-0042hungaryregional innovation policyeu accessionglobal value chainso38r58e65
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Szalavetz Andrea
spellingShingle Szalavetz Andrea
Innovation in Hungary - The Impact of EU Accession and Integration into Global Value Chains
International Journal of Management and Economics
hungary
regional innovation policy
eu accession
global value chains
o38
r58
e65
author_facet Szalavetz Andrea
author_sort Szalavetz Andrea
title Innovation in Hungary - The Impact of EU Accession and Integration into Global Value Chains
title_short Innovation in Hungary - The Impact of EU Accession and Integration into Global Value Chains
title_full Innovation in Hungary - The Impact of EU Accession and Integration into Global Value Chains
title_fullStr Innovation in Hungary - The Impact of EU Accession and Integration into Global Value Chains
title_full_unstemmed Innovation in Hungary - The Impact of EU Accession and Integration into Global Value Chains
title_sort innovation in hungary - the impact of eu accession and integration into global value chains
publisher Sciendo
series International Journal of Management and Economics
issn 2299-9701
publishDate 2014-11-01
description This paper argues that EU accession has brought about minimal changes in the patterns of innovation in Hungary. The reason why is not that the ‘EU factor’ is of minor importance; rather, it is Hungary's inability to use EU resources effectively, so as to fully benefit from EU membership. The Hungarian story also demonstrates that the EU cannot block member states from reversing reform or abusing the opportunities EU membership offers to them. We contend that globalization (global value chain integration) has more effectively contributed to Hungary's knowledge-based upgrading than Europeanization (in the sense of policy transfer; access to EU Structural & Cohesion Funds, and integration in the European Research Area). This argument is substantiated with a case study on innovation strategy design and implementation, which illustrates the ambiguous impact of Europeanization, which is contrasted with our investigation of integration in global value chains, conducted through interviews of foreign-owned manufacturing companies about their R&D-based upgrading experience.
topic hungary
regional innovation policy
eu accession
global value chains
o38
r58
e65
url https://doi.org/10.2478/ijme-2014-0042
work_keys_str_mv AT szalavetzandrea innovationinhungarytheimpactofeuaccessionandintegrationintoglobalvaluechains
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