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National Competitiveness and Sustainability: Friends or Foes

Małgorzata Żmuda ()
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Małgorzata Żmuda: Cologne Business School

A chapter in The Future of the UN Sustainable Development Goals, 2020, pp 291-307 from Springer

Abstract: Abstract This paper touches upon two important topics of modern economics: national competitivenessNational competitiveness and sustainabilitySustainability, and shows that these concepts do not necessarily have to be seen as “foes”. CompetitivenessCompetitiveness in this study departs from the narrow, “low-road”, cost-based, “zero-sum game” trade perspective and is defined as a national ability to reach developmental goals in the era of globalization. These goals have been divided into instrumental (productivity- and innovationInnovation-driven evolution of trade specialization leading to growth, which is measured with GDP per capita) and fundamental (“beyond GDP goalsBeyond-GDP goals”, reflecting socio-economic developmentEconomic development without ecological degradation). The second key issue emerging from this paper, simultaneously contributing to the sustainable competitiveness debate, relates to the positioning of the catching-up economiesCatching-up economies in the global competitive landscape. For these countries, a transition from a low-road to a high-road strategyStrategy is particularly challenging as their rapid growth and current global positioning has been mainly based on low-cost competitive factors and high-emission industries. Without a clear, long-term vision, based on institutional support for eco-innovationInnovation and efforts to increase the educationEducation or consciousness levels (for both production and consumption), these countries may get stuck in the middle-income trap. Through the suggested sustainableSustainable competitivenessCompetitiveness model, a link between national competitive ability, competitive strategyStrategy, and strategic socio-economic goals has been made. This modelModel proposes an approach to dynamically represent competitiveness development path for countries at low-, middle-, and high-income levels.

Date: 2020
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:spr:csrchp:978-3-030-21154-7_15

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DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-21154-7_15

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