Discrepancies in European Union Funding across member nations and sectors as of 2019

This paper aims to explore the discrepancies in attracting European Union funding across member states and across different sectors of activity. Specifically, it aims to discover if there is a set of rule or model that can be attributed to the structure of European Union funding across nations and s...

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Main Author: Olteţeanu Angel-Cristian
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2020-07-01
Series:Proceedings of the International Conference on Business Excellence
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/picbe-2020-0067
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spelling doaj-5638499e3d834b98abfe2e8f18cb74432021-09-05T14:00:58ZengSciendoProceedings of the International Conference on Business Excellence2558-96522020-07-0114170871610.2478/picbe-2020-0067picbe-2020-0067Discrepancies in European Union Funding across member nations and sectors as of 2019Olteţeanu Angel-Cristian0Bucharest University of Economic Studies, Bucharest, RomaniaThis paper aims to explore the discrepancies in attracting European Union funding across member states and across different sectors of activity. Specifically, it aims to discover if there is a set of rule or model that can be attributed to the structure of European Union funding across nations and sectors to discern if some sectors are much more lucrative from the point of attracting European Union funding than others. In addition, beyond the purely economic and business considerations, the article wants to investigate if some ideologies, regimes, or parties are more successful in general in attracting European Union funding by sharing membership between European international parties or other reasons such as funding majoritarian populist parties to sustain European Union membership. The topic is of recent international economics significance in the context of Brexit and the buildup of Eurosceptic sentiments across the European Union as well as the international polarization between blocks of political power in the global trade war. This topic has been addressed partially before, mostly by journalists but represents a niche novelty in academic studies of International Relations. The methodology used will be both through argumentation of historical and current evidence as well as empiric data collection.https://doi.org/10.2478/picbe-2020-0067discrepancieseuropean union fundingsectorial differencesstrategic sectorspolitical disparity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Olteţeanu Angel-Cristian
spellingShingle Olteţeanu Angel-Cristian
Discrepancies in European Union Funding across member nations and sectors as of 2019
Proceedings of the International Conference on Business Excellence
discrepancies
european union funding
sectorial differences
strategic sectors
political disparity
author_facet Olteţeanu Angel-Cristian
author_sort Olteţeanu Angel-Cristian
title Discrepancies in European Union Funding across member nations and sectors as of 2019
title_short Discrepancies in European Union Funding across member nations and sectors as of 2019
title_full Discrepancies in European Union Funding across member nations and sectors as of 2019
title_fullStr Discrepancies in European Union Funding across member nations and sectors as of 2019
title_full_unstemmed Discrepancies in European Union Funding across member nations and sectors as of 2019
title_sort discrepancies in european union funding across member nations and sectors as of 2019
publisher Sciendo
series Proceedings of the International Conference on Business Excellence
issn 2558-9652
publishDate 2020-07-01
description This paper aims to explore the discrepancies in attracting European Union funding across member states and across different sectors of activity. Specifically, it aims to discover if there is a set of rule or model that can be attributed to the structure of European Union funding across nations and sectors to discern if some sectors are much more lucrative from the point of attracting European Union funding than others. In addition, beyond the purely economic and business considerations, the article wants to investigate if some ideologies, regimes, or parties are more successful in general in attracting European Union funding by sharing membership between European international parties or other reasons such as funding majoritarian populist parties to sustain European Union membership. The topic is of recent international economics significance in the context of Brexit and the buildup of Eurosceptic sentiments across the European Union as well as the international polarization between blocks of political power in the global trade war. This topic has been addressed partially before, mostly by journalists but represents a niche novelty in academic studies of International Relations. The methodology used will be both through argumentation of historical and current evidence as well as empiric data collection.
topic discrepancies
european union funding
sectorial differences
strategic sectors
political disparity
url https://doi.org/10.2478/picbe-2020-0067
work_keys_str_mv AT olteteanuangelcristian discrepanciesineuropeanunionfundingacrossmembernationsandsectorsasof2019
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