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EU Enlargement: Opportunities or Threats for NESIS

Workshop on Productivity, Competitiveness & The New Information Economy Business, Systemic and Measurement Issues ISTAT Istituto Nazionale di Statistica Rome, Italy, 26 – 27 June 2003. EU Enlargement: Opportunities or Threats for NESIS. Benjamin Adesola PhD INFORMER S.A.

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EU Enlargement: Opportunities or Threats for NESIS

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  1. Workshop on Productivity, Competitiveness & The New Information Economy Business, Systemic and Measurement Issues ISTAT Istituto Nazionale di Statistica Rome, Italy, 26 – 27 June 2003 EU Enlargement:Opportunities or Threatsfor NESIS Benjamin Adesola PhD INFORMER S.A. 1 Rue du Fort Dumoulin, L-1425 Luxembourg Tel: +352 4591 4550 Fax: +352 4591 4571 Email: benjamin.adesola@artemis.lu

  2. Presentation Outline • The Challenges of EU enlargement • EU Policies and NESIS Project • Indicators of Productivity & Competitiveness • 4. Opportunities or Threats for NESIS Indicators • 5. Questions and Answers – Lessons Learnt Oppotunities or Threats for NESIS

  3. Why Enlargement? Enlargement is the most ambitious project that the EU is undertaking. It is the reunification of continental Europe and its people in a constitutional framework, that encourages them to work together in peace and stability. For the people of Central and Easter Europe, European Union symbolises the values to which the have longed to return for more than a generation during the period of Iron Curtain and the Cold War. The prospect of EU membership has helped to make irreversible their choices of pluralist democracy and market economy, and encouraged them on the path to reform. For the people of the present EU, stability and democracy in Central and Easter Europe have yielded great benefits, not only in terms of security, but also of prosperity: increase in trade. These benefits will be consolidated and augmented, for both old and new members, when Enlargement take place in 2004, provided that the EU meets the challenges which it presently Faces. Wim Kok Report to the European Commission Former Deputy Prime Minister of the Netherlands Enlarging the European Union: Achievements and Challenges. European University Institute, Robert Schuman Center for Advanced Studies Oppotunities or Threats for NESIS

  4. The Challenges of EU Enlargement Accession Negotiations Copenhagen European Council December 2002 • 10 acceding countries • 75 million new citizens • 25 member states • 450 million citizens Who are the accession countries? Cyprus Czeck Republic Estonia Hungary Latvia Lithuania Malta Poland Slovak Republic Slovenia What are the challenges? • Political • Legal • Economic • Social • Technological • Environmental Where are these challenges? What do we know about them? What are their nature, structures and forms? Who is involved, when and where? How do we overcome these challenges? How do we conceptualise and reconceptualise? Oppotunities or Threats for NESIS

  5. EU Policies and NESIS Project The Presidency Conclusion at the Lisbon EU Summit “to become the most competitive and dynamic knowledge-based economy in the world, capable of sustaining economic growth with more and better jobs and greater social cohesion” European Commission and European Council 2000,2001 • NESIS activities are organised around four Policy and conceptual pillars • that emerged from the Lisbon Strategy • Pillar I macroeconomics stability and environmental sustainability (WP5.1) • Pillar II productivity and competitiveness in the new economy (WP 5.2 – 5.5) • Pillar III human investment in the new information economy (5.6) • Pillar IV social inclusion in the new information economy (5.7 – 5.9) Oppotunities or Threats for NESIS

  6. NESIS Indicators of Productivity & Competitiveness WP 5.2 Review of indicators and méthodologies on productivity and territorial competitiveness through network management in the new information economy. • What are the indicators of productivity and competitiveness? • In what context and for what purposes? • What are the indicators and what are the methodologies for acquiring them? • When, by whom and how do we develop methodologies to derive indicators? WP 5.3 Policy guidelines in relation to WP 5.2 • What policies and what are sustainable indicators, in what context and for what purpose? • What are the indicators of PA’s policies e.g. to citizens, enterprise and processes? • What methodologies are required to derive policy indicators? • How do we develop methodologies to derive indicators? Oppotunities or Threats for NESIS

  7. NESIS Indicators of Productivity & Competitiveness WP 5.4 The impact of ICT usage on business organisation and business processes. • What are the indicators of business organisation? • What are the indicators of business processes? • What methodologies are required? • How do we develop methodologies to derive indicators? WP 5.5 Indicators on enterprise dynamics within the new economy. • What are indicators on enterprise dynamics within the new economy? • Where are indicators on enterprise dynamics within the new economy? • What methodologies are required to derive indicators on enterprise dynamics? • How do we develop methodologies to derive indicators? Oppotunities or Threats for NESIS

  8. The Candidate countries, Statistical Indicators and Sustainability in New Europe Why is it important to involve Candidate countries in NESIS? ‘There is no denying the political importance of involving these countries in EU activities or of questioning either their interest in or ability to producing statistics of various kinds. There is no disputing the need to prepare them for seemless integration into the Union in due course. ’ But Most candidate economies are undergoing a dual transition, in institutional structure from planned to market economy and in industrial structure from traditional pattern of Economic activities (sectorally and technologically), to much newer structure. This is an extract from NESIS Contract for Accompanying Measure in a KB Society Annex 1 – Description of Work NESIS IST-2000-31118 Oppotunities or Threats for NESIS

  9. The Candidate countries, Statistical Indicators and Sustainability Objectives of a NESIS WP addressing Candidate countries • Assessing the applicability of the indicators being developed and evaluated in the EU • to Candidate economies. • Investigate the relationship between existing indicators of transition to market economy • status and functioning. • For example: • a. Is the speed of transition in one sense related to speed of transition in the other? • How and Why? • b. Is the relationship mediated through variables, such as current macroeconomic • performance, degree of openness or geographical location? • c. Is this in turn related to indicators of macroeconomic growth and stability, of environmental • and social performance, and of regional, sectoral and enterprise competitiveness and • productivity in the Candidate economies? • Given the changes taking place in the new economy it is inevitable that the revision of concepts and • measures of efficient market functioning would lead to reappraisal of standard indicators of transition • to market economy status. What are the Indicators? Where are the Indicators? How are the Indicators derived? Oppotunities or Threats for NESIS

  10. The Candidate countries, Statistical Indicators and Sustainability Example questions constitute a large, complex, discrete and separate body of issues but with the potential to dilute NESIS current trajectory in relation to the matured EU market economies. However the enlargement is here and now, with the benefit of sustainable Development to NESIS Indicators in the New Europe. The Heat in on Opportunities for NESIS Indicators • Framework for assessing applicability of indicators developed and evaluated • through NESIS four pillars in Candicate economies. • Create awareness and standards for developing best practice indicators in the New Europe. • Indicators of Productivity and Competitiveness in the New Europe and more. • Development of working group towards sustainable development. Threats for NESIS Indicators 1. Risk in the adoption of measurements prescribed at local level 2. Lack of sustainability in existing indicators for New Europe Oppotunities or Threats for NESIS

  11. Questions and Discussion How long have we got? What are the risk? What is the roadmap? Lessons Learnt Oppotunities or Threats for NESIS

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