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Shifting paths? The evolution of Southern European growth trajectories between the global financial crisis and the Covid pandemic

Fabio Bulfone, Mischa Stratenwerth and Arianna Tassinari

No 25/4, MPIfG Discussion Paper from Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies

Abstract: This paper traces the growth trajectories of the Southern European economies (Greece, Italy, Portugal, and Spain) from the financial to the covid crisis. From a review of the comparative political economy literature focusing on Southern Europe, we derive three propositions regarding the growth profile, the development of high value-added services and manufacturing exports, and employment outcomes. To assess the accuracy of these propositions, we conduct growth decompositions based on import-adjusted demand components as well as on sectoral output and employment indicators. The data show that Southern European economies are similar in that export-led growth has not been sufficient to boost aggregate growth, stimulate high value-added services or manufacturing, reverse pro-cyclical employment declines, or create high-wage employment opportunities. But the Southern European economies also differ, both in terms of their sectoral growth profiles and their aggregate performance. In the second half of the decade, Portugal and Spain managed to combine domestic demand and exports to achieve stronger growth than Italy and Greece. Sectoral developments in Portugal and Spain (and to a lesser extent in Italy) tentatively suggest a potential "Iberian growth path" that is compatible with euro area constraints but ultimately peripheral. The paper concludes by considering the empirical and theoretical implications of these findings for the study of the Southern European model of capitalism.

Keywords: Comparative political economy; economic sectors; export growth; growth models; post-austerity; Southern Europe; Exportwachstum; Post-Austerität; Südeuropa; Vergleichende Politische Ökonomie; Wachstumsmodelle; Wirtschaftssektoren (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2025
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-eec and nep-eur
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