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Közgazdaság- és Regionális Tudományi Kutatóközpont
Világgazdasági Intézet
A „Top International Economics Think Tanks 2019" egyike
(2019 Global Go To Think Tank Report, University of Pennsylvania)
🔍

Working Papers

Nr. 268

<p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>Gergely Kádár :</strong></span><br />China’s strategic considerations for infrastructure building in the Central and Eastern European Region</p>

Nr. 267

<p>The role of rents in emerging market economies</p>

No.266

<p>The impact of the crisis on and crisis-handling patterns in foreign-owned companies in Hungary</p>

No.265

<p>Electric vehicle revolution – positions of the Japanese automotive suppliers in Central Europe</p>

No. 264

China’s Mergers &amp; Acquisitions Activity in the United States – The Case of TikTok

No. 263

Globalization - Challenges for economic policy

No. 262

Climate action in the European Commission's natural gas policy

No. 261

The three archetype European historic development models and their impact in East-Central Europe

No. 260

Coronavirus crisis - trade effects for the Iberian and Visegrád countries

No. 259

The Hungarian utility cost reduction programme - An impact assessment

Nr. 258

The Balkan model and the balkanization of East Central Europe

No. 254

Revisiting the management of stationary fuel supply security and gas diversification in Hungary

No. 253

Central and Eastern Europe's dependent development in German automotive value chains

No. 252

Foreign investment screening in Europe and the V4 countries today

No. 251

Effects of Industry 4.0 on Reshoring Investments - Hungarian Experiences

Nr. 249

Pull factors for Chinese FDI in East Central Europe

Nr. 250

Pull factors driving Russian multinationals into five CEE countries: A sectoral overview

Nr. 248

Indian companies’ technological investments in the EU with a special focus on Central and Eastern Europe

Nr. 247

Eastern Europe as investment location for Turkish OFDI

Nr. 246

Brazilian Foreign Direct Investment in ECE: host country determinants

Nr. 245

New developmentalism in the 21st century: towards a new research agenda

Nr. 244

<div title=""> <div> <div><strong>Yushan Li</strong><br />China’s go out policy - A review on China’s promotion policy for outward foreign direct investment from a historical perspective</div> </div> </div>

Nr. 243

Security of energy supply and gas diversification in Poland

Nr. 242

Independence of central banks after the crisis - focus on Hungary

Nr. 241

Financing operations of the European Investment Bank (EIB) in the Southern Mediterranean countries

Nr. 240

Indo-Japanese Relations on an Upward Trend

Nr. 239

Four years in the club: from external to internal Europeanization in Croatia

Nr. 238

Managing energy supply security and gas diversification in Hungary - Putting theory into practice

Nr. 237

Driving forces behind the international expansion strategies of Chinese MNEs

Nr. 236

International expansion of Russian multinationals: A focus on home-country push factors, Europe and five CEE countries

Nr. 235

South Africa: a re-emerging player in outward FDI

No. 234

Internationalization of Indian Multinational Enterprises

No. 233

Turkish investments abroad, with a special focus on Central and Eastern Europe

No.232

Emerging multinational enterprises from East and Southeast Asia in V4 countries and Slovenia

No. 231

Brazilian companies going global

No. 230

Different interpretations of the automotive industry and its role in three semi-peripheral regions of the EU

No. 229

FDI promotion of the Visegrád countries in the era of global value chains

No. 228

Export as a form of SME-internationalisation after the crisis – experiences of three European regions

No. 227

New developmentalist experiments in Brazil and Egypt - a comparative study

No. 226

From party state capture to party business capture Model feature of Visegrád countries?

No. 225

The Aid for Trade initiative and the export performance of the Iberian EU-countries

No. 224

Post-crisis foreign trade trends and policies on the periphery of the European Union – comparison of the Iberian, Baltic and Central European region

No. 223

Developmental states in the 21st century: Analytical structure of a new approach

No. 222.

The emergence of patronage state in Central Europe - The case of FDI-related policies in Hungary

No. 221

Central and East European Diversification under New Gas Market Conditions

No. 220

The FDI-led development model revisited? The case of Hungary

No. 219

Post‐crisis developments in global value chains - example of foreign investors’ Hungarian subsidiaries

No. 218

Scientific cooperation between the European Union and Turkey – advantages and possible synergies

No. 217

Upgrading of Hungarian subsidiaries in machinery and automotive global value chains

No. 216

Capital, labour, democracy and the end of capitalism

No. 215

Towards a new model of state-led development in Brazil (?)

No. 214

Ties of Visegrád countries with East Asia – trade and investment

No. 213

Rwanda: developmental success story in a unique setting

No. 212

Innovative finance for development – Instruments of social integration and responsibility in lower-middle-income countries (LMICs)

No. 211

Privatization and state property management in post-transition economies

No. 210

Russian capital in the Visegrád countries

No. 209

Economic success without well-being? - The case of Hungary

No. 208

Chinese investments and financial engagement in Hungary

No. 207

Chinese outward FDI in Europe and the Central and Eastern European region within a global context

No. 206

Trade and investment relations between Central and Eastern Europe and Latin America

No. 205

Financial regulation differences in the EU and the US

No. 204

EU Governance Trends - Dilemmas and Recommendations for the Visegrad Countries

No. 203

World’s agricultural production and trade: Food security at stake? (<em>first version</em>)

No. 202

Youth unemployment or NEETs? Reasons and treatment in Europe

No. 201

Central and Eastern Europe’s dependence on Russian gas, western CIS transit states and the quest for diversification through the Southern Corridor

No. 200

The development of Hungarian Foreign Trade with Asia

No. 199

EUROS(C)EPSIS - THE THEORY OF THE OPTIMUM CURRENCY AREA AND THE HISTORY OF THE EURO

No. 198

ON THE NATURE OF THE PRESENT WORLD ECONOMIC CRISIS. A NON-NEOLIBERAL SKETCH

No. 197

TRANSPORT AND SUSTAINABILITY, WITH SPECIAL REGARD TO THE EU TRANSPORT WHITE PAPER OF 2011

No. 196

WHY DO WE COMPARE THE EU WITH THE USA ALL THE TIME?

No. 195

INDUSTRIAL CONCENTRATION, REGIONAL EMPLOYMENT AND PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH: EVIDENCE FROM THE LATE TRANSITION PERIOD OF HUNGARY

No. 194

EVALUATING THE RISK OF UNEMPLOYMENT: COMPARISON BETWEEN THE TWO MOST POPULATED GREEK REGIONS WITH THE ENTIRE COUNTRY

No. 193

TRANSPORT POLICY IN THE EUROPEAN UNION FROM AN EASTERN PERSPECTIVE

No. 192

THE EUROPEAN NEIGHBOURHOOD POLICY. CONCEPT, PRACTICE, FUTURE AND THE PRIORITIES OF HUNGARY

No. 191

THE CONCENTRIC-CIRCLE MODEL OF FDI SPILLOVER EFFECTS ESTIMATION USING HUNGARIAN PANEL DATA

No. 190

TRANSFORMATION AND CATCH-UP ISSUES IN HUNGARY, EXAMINED IN NETWORK ALIGNMENT TERMS

No. 189

THE EVOLUTION OF A POST-CRISIS WORLD: NEW TRENDS AND STRUCTURES IN A TURBULENT GLOBAL SYSTEM

No. 188

EXAMINING THE IMPACT OF EUROPEAN REGIONAL POLICY

No. 187

CLUSTERS AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF SUPPLIER NETWORKS FOR TRANSNATIONAL COMPANIES

No. 186

AN INITIAL INVESTIGATION OF THE EU&#039;S 2020 CLIMATE CHANGE PACKAGE AND ITS POTENTIAL DOMESTIC IMPACT

No. 185

STATE CONTROL, OWNERSHIP TRANSFORMATION AND FIRM RESTRUCTURING: THE CASE OF HUNGARY

No. 184

RUSSIAN INVESTMENT ABROAD. THE BASIC FLOWS AND FEATURES

No. 183

EU-UKRAINIAN RELATIONS IN THE LIGHT OF THE NEW AGREEMENT. UKRAINE&#039;S EXPECTATIONS AND REALITIES

No. 182

RUSSIAN IDEAS ON INTEGRATION WITHIN THE CIS SPACE. HOW DO THEY MATCH OR CLASH WITH EU IDEAS?

No. 181

ON THE POLITICS OF CLIMATE CHANGE: IS THERE AN EAST–WEST DIVIDE?

No. 180

THE POLISH PERSPECTIVE ON 2008-9 EU BUDGET REVIEW

No. 179

THE SHORT AND MEDIUM-TERM IMPACT OF POLITICAL INSTABILITY ON UKRAINE&#039;S ECONOMY

No. 178

BEHIND THE FIGURES. THE MAIN FOREIGN TRADE-RELATED FACTORS AFFECTING WORLD ECONOMIC GROWTH SINCE 1990

No. 177

SUBNATIONAL REGIONALISM IN A SUPRANATIONAL CONTEXT: THE CASE OF HUNGARY

No. 176

ANALYSIS OF THE SUCCESS AND FAILURE IN THE LABOUR MARKETS OF SELECTED EU MEMBER-STATES. MACROECONOMIC ASPECTS

No. 175

THE UKRAINIAN ECONOMY IN EUROPE

No. 174

INDUSTRIAL COMPETITIVENESS AND LABOUR MARKET TRANSFORMATION IN HUNGARY: MACROECONOMIC DEVELOPMENTS AND EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS

No. 173

MARKET CORRECTIVES, MARKET PALLIATIVES AND THE NEW POLITICS OF EUROPEAN INDUSTRIAL AND REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT

No. 172

R AND D, AND COMPETITIVENESS IN THE ENLARGED EU. THE ROLE OF THE STATE AND FINANCING

No. 171

THE HUNGARIAN COUNTRYSIDE IN 2015

No. 170

RELATIONSHIP OF STRUCTURAL CHANGE AND COMPETITIVENESS IN HUNGARIAN MANUFACTURING 1998-2003

No. 169

WEIGHTING THE POLITICS OF THE ENVIRONMENT IN THE NEW EUROPE

No. 168

RUSSIAN FDI IN CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPEAN COUNTRIES. OPPORTUNITIES AND THREATS

No. 167

AT A TURNING POINT? The Southeast European Economies

No. 166

COMPETITIVENESS AND INDUSTRIAL RENEWAL VIA PRODUCTION RELOCATION BY GLOBAL MULTINATIONAL NETWORKS

No. 165

NEW MODES OF GOVERNANCE AND EU STRUCTURAL AND COHESION POLICY IN ESTONIA, LATVIA AND LITHUANIA

No. 164

DO MULTINATIONALS &#039;MISUSE&#039; CORPORATE INCOME-TAX HOLIDAYS? An analysis based on Hungarian balance-sheet figures

No. 163

COMPETITIVENESS AND POSITION CHANGES OF HUNGARIAN MANUFACTURING PRODUCT GROUPS IN THE EU MARKET

No. 162

THE IMPACT OF FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT ON REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT IN POLAND

No. 161

DIVIDE AND CONQUER: THE EU ENLARGEMENT&#039;S SUCCESSFUL CONCLUSION?

No. 160

DETERMINANTS OF INDUSTRIAL RESTRUCTURING IN THE PRE-ACCESSION TRANSITION ECONOMIES: THE CASE OF THE CZECH REPUBLIC, HUNGARY AND POLAND

No. 159

COMPETITIVENESS STRATEGIES, RESOURCE STRUGGLES AND NATIONAL INTEREST IN THE NEW EUROPE

No. 158

THE FIRST EU EASTERN ENLARGEMENT. IMPACTS ON THE GERMAN ECONOMY AND PUBLIC PERCEPTIONS

No. 157

BELARUS ON THE EU BORDERS. THE IMPACT OF ENLARGEMENT ON TRADE AND CROSS-BORDER COOPERATION

No. 156

POTENTIAL MIGRATION AFTER THE FIRST ROUND OF EU EASTERN ENLARGEMENT. IMPACTS ON GERMANY&#039;S LABOUR MARKET AND WELFARE SYSTEM

No. 155

STRUCTURAL CHANGE - STRUCTURAL COMPETITIVENESS

No. 154

THE IMPACT OF CHANGES IN COMPETITIVENESS ON LABOUR-MARKET AND HUMAN-RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT. THE CASE OF HUNGARY

No. 153

EU INTEGRATION MECHANISMS AFFECTING HUNGARIAN PUBLIC POLICIES IN WASTE MANAGEMENT

No. 152

JAPAN&#039;S TRADE AND FDI POLICIES IN THE FIRST DECADE OF THE 21ST CENTURY FACTS AND PROBABLE TRENDS

No. 151

ROMANIA AND THE TRADE AND THE DEVELOPMENT APPROACHES TO CEE CONVERGENCE WITH THE EU, UNDER THE COMPETITIVE PRESSURES OF INTEGRATION

No. 150

FISCAL ADJUSTMENT IN HUNGARY (1991-2003)

No. 149

HUNGARY AND BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA: A SUCCESS AND A FAILURE OF TRANSITION

No. 148

REGIONAL COOPERATION IN THE BALKANS AS AN ESSENTIAL STEP TOWARDS EU MEMBERSHIP Lessons of Visegrád

No. 147

ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL RELATIONS AFTER THE EU ENLARGEMENT: THE VISEGRÁD COUNTRIES AND RUSSIA, UKRAINE, BELARUS AND MOLDOVA

No. 146

STATE AID TO THE HUNGARIAN MANUFACTURING SECTOR 1990-2000

No. 145

SUSTAINABLE-SETTLEMENT CRITERIA, ECO-CITIES AND PROSPECTS IN CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE

No. 144

COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF COMPETITIVENESS: THE CZECH REPUBLIC AND HUNGARY - AN INSTITUTIONAL APPROACH

No. 143

CHALLENGES OF HUNGARIAN SCIENCE POLICY: THE EVOLUTION OF A KNOWLEDGE-BASED ECONOMY AND SOCIETY

No. 142

PERIPHERAL PARTICIPANTS IN GLOBAL PRODUCTION NETWORKS. CHANGING DYNAMICS IN THE TRANSFORMATION FROM INDUSTRIAL TO INTELLECTUAL CAPITALISM

No. 141

AN FDI-BASED DEVELOPMENT MODEL FOR HUNGARY - NEW CHALLENGES?

No. 140

POTENTIAL MIGRATION FROM HUNGARY TO AUSTRIA AFTER EU ACCESSION AND POSSIBLE IMPACTS OF THIS

No. 139

INFRASTRUCTURE NETWORKS IN CENTRAL EUROPE AND EU ENLARGEMENT

No. 138

FAR EASTERN RESPONSES TO GLOBALIZATION

No. 137

TRANSFORMATION AND HUNGARIAN REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT: FACTS, TRENDS, DILEMMAS AND OBJECTIVES

No. 136

BUSINESS-CYCLE DEVELOPMENT IN HUNGARY AND EUROPE: THE CONSEQUENCES OF EU AND EMU ACCESSION FOR HUNGARY&#039;S LABOUR MARKET

No. 135

THE TRANSITION TO A MARKET ECONOMY IN THE SUCCESSOR STATES OF FORMER YUGOSLAVIA DIFFERENCES OF NORTH AND SOUTH

No. 134

&#039;TERTIARIZATION&#039; OF MANUFACTURING INDUSTRY IN THE NEW ECONOMY EXPERIENCES IN HUNGARIAN COMPANIES

No. 133

FOOD AID FOR FOOD SECURITY? TRENDS AND CANGES IN THE 1990S

No. 132

FOREIGN TRADE FLOWS AND ECONOMIC ACTIVITY IN SLOVENIA: CAUSALITY PATTERNS FROM A TRANSITION EPISODE

No. 131

THE HUNGARIAN AUTOMOTIVE INDUSTRY

No. 130

BANKRUPTCY REGULATIONS, POLICY CREDIBILITY AND ASSET TRANSFERS IN HUNGARY

No. 129

SOME NEGLECTED EFFECTS OF EU ENLARGEMENT RATIONALIZATION AND SPECIALIZATION

No. 128

THE MANAGEMENT OF ACCESSION TO THE EUROPEAN UNION IN POLAND AND HUNGARY

No. 127

DEVELOPMENT THEORY ON RELATIONS BETWEEN THE STATE AND THE MARKET AND ON THEIR EFFECTS ON THE PERIPHERIES OF THE WORLD ECONOMY

No. 126

SPILLOVER EFFECTS AND BUSINESS LINKAGES OF FOREIGN-OWNED FIRMS IN HUNGARY

No. 125

OUTWARD FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT IN HUNGARY MOTIVATIONS AND EFFECTS

No. 124

SUBCONTRACTING AND OUTWARD PROCESSING TRADE AS A FORM OF NETWORKING IN HUNGARY

No. 123

WHAT PATTERNS DOES HUNGARY&#039;S REAL INTEGRATION INTO THE EU SHOW? A &#039;HECKSCHER-OHLIN&#039; MODEL AND SOME TIME-SERIES ANALYSES

No. 122

Some Reflections on Possible Scenarios for EU Enlargement - Some Key Issues in Understanding the Negotiations on Accession to the European Union

No. 121

Economic Breaktrough by the Mediterranean Countries in the Context of EU Enlargement

No. 120

Life after Death: Is It Efficient to Reallocate the Assets of Financially Distressed Firms? Result of an Empirical Survey

No. 119

Western Policy Lessons in the Second Phase of Regional Transformation

No. 118

The Competitiveness of Hungarian Companies

No. 117

Multinationals and Trade: Trading multinationals - the example of Hungary and the USA

No. 116

Technical Barriers to Trade for Hungarian Exports to the European Union

No. 115

The Agricultural Aspects of Hungarian Accession to the EU

No. 114

Japan and Asia in a New Global Age

No. 113

The Structural and Regional Implications of the New Economy in Transition Economies

No. 112

Risk Factors in the Establishment and Running of EMU

No. 111

Economic Relations between Russia and the Central European Countries

No. 110

Regional Development and the EU Pre-Accession and Structural Funds Trends and Possible Courses of Action

No. 109

Coming in from the Cold - The Hungarian Economy in the 20th Century

No. 108

The Effects of Foreign Direct Investment on R&amp;D and Innovation in Hungary

No. 107

Reflections on the Timing of EU Enlargement