Skip to main content

2002 | Buch

Globalization and Regionalization

Challenges for Public Policy

herausgegeben von: David B. Audretsch, Charles F. Bonser

Verlag: Springer US

insite
SUCHEN

Über dieses Buch

In this volume, David B. Audretsch and Charles F. Bonser present a view of Globalization and Regionalization that holds that the interaction between a more open trading system and the new telecommunications and computer technology has substantially increased productivity and facilitated the fragmentation of the production process. The fragmentation of the production process has resulted in a new international organization of production. It has accelerated the globalization of national economies and has allowed firms to take advantage of low wages, wherever they are to be found, and, where important, to locate production facilities close to their customers. This expansion in international trade and production mobility has resulted in new sources of gain that contribute to the new economy.
In the second chapter of this volume, Alfred C. Aman, Jr. examines whether globalization dictates new approaches to governance. The process by which public policy in England has incorporated regional government is the focus of Kenneth Spencer in Chapter 3. In the fourth chapter Lawrence S. Davidson provides an analysis of the impact of globalization on manufacturing in the US Midwest. In Chapter 5, John W. Ryan shows how there is a dual role of universities in the global economy. On the one hand, universities serve as institutions that foster globalization and reduce the isolation of regions. On the other hand, universities themselves are shaped and influenced by globalization. David B. Audretsch and A. Roy Thurik, in Chapter 6, show how globalization has led to the emergence of the strategic management of regions. In Chapter 7, Jean-Pierre van Aubel and Frans van Nispen examine the links between federalization and globalization in the European context. The impact of globalization on regulatory institutions is the focus of Montserrat Cuchillo in Chapter 8. Finally, in Chapter 9, David Eaton examines the relationship between global trade sovereignty and sub-national autonomy.
Taken together, these chapters provide a compelling view that public policy must be considered in a new light in the global economy. Not only does policy have to consider global implications, but also the importance of local characteristics and regional strengths.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Frontmatter
1. Globalization and Regionalization: Introduction
Abstract
The beginning of the 21 st century finds the Atlantic Alliance partners in evolution toward a new relationship in the key policy arenas of economic and social development, international security, international trade and competition, and the need to deal effectively with environmental and public health problems associated with an expanding global marketplace. The problems associated with these issues have strained relations between Europe and North America. This has been exacerbated by internal preoccupations on both continents that have reduced communication opportunities, and led to misunderstandings on both sides of the Atlantic. It is clear to both the leadership of the European Union and the United States that this potential estrangement is not in the interests of either continent.
David B. Audretsch, Charles F. Bonser
2. Globalization, Democracy, and New Approaches to Governance in the United States
Abstract
New approaches to governance in the United States will be closely tied to the ways in which lawmakers conceptualize globalization. This is because global processes—be they economic, social, or cultural—all directly affect the roles states play in various regulatory arenas at home and abroad. The impact of global processes on markets and states contributes to the basic political economy framework within which various regulatory reforms have developed and will develop in the future. The underlying basis of these effects provides the theoretical structure within which approaches to governance evolve, opening the way to new approaches at domestic and international levels of governance. In this essay, I will focus primarily on some of the domestic regulatory changes now occurring in the US and their relationship to globalization. I will concentrate, in particular, on the risk of increasing the democracy deficit that globalization encourages and I will make three proposals to mitigate the negative effects of globalization on governance at the domestic level.1
Alfred C. Aman Jr.
3. Reaching out to Regional Government in England?
Abstract
The United Kingdom has undergone a transformation in both governmental and administrative reform within the regions of the country. Further devolution to Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland has taken place. Scotland now has its Parliament dealing with home affairs and able to create primary legislation. The previous Scottish Parliament “was adjourned, never to meet again, on 25 March 1707” (Black 2000: p. I). Wales and Northern Ireland have their Assemblies, the latter in abeyance subject to further negotiations, responsible for home affairs matters though unable to create new primary statutes though able to comment upon and interpret legislation with a regional voice. The Scots Parliament and the assemblies came into being in 1999, with the Northern Ireland Assembly having a rather one-off early life and linked to cross border initiatives with the Irish Republic. In London, the mayor was elected on 4 May 2000, as were 25 members of the new Greater London Authority. The mayor, Ken Livingstone, the former Labour Member of Parliament turned independent, and the Greater London Authority took over running many aspects of Greater London on 3 July 2000.
Kenneth Spencer
4. Globalization and Changes in Industrial Concentration: State and Regional Exports from America’s Heartland, 1988 To 1997
Abstract
This paper is a first-step toward understanding how changes in globalization in the 1990s affected the industrial concentration of export sales in America’s Heartland (defined in this paper as the following seven states: Kentucky, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, Tennessee, and Wisconsin). Two measures of concentration, based on sector share of export sales, are measured and compared for each of the seven states, the region, and the US. The first of these measures, Top 3, is the sum of the shares of the three largest export industries in 1988 for each state and region. The second measure, Top 12, is defined as the sum of the absolute difference of the actual sector share from 8.33 (the sector share that would prevail if each of the 12 largest export sectors had equal shares of exports and these 12 sectors exhausted all export sales.) This is a measure of concentration (or diversification) because its value would equal zero if all industries had equal shares. The value of Top 12 increases as sector exports are less equally distributed across industries.
Lawrence S. Davidson
5. Globalization and the Local University
Abstract
There is widespread awareness that “globalization” is “real”; i.e., is a factor that affects the mission and context of the major institutions of current world society—nations that are mature, developing, and under-developed.
John W. Ryan
6. Globalization and the Strategic Management of Regions
Abstract
Perhaps one of the less-understood phenomena accompanying the increased globalization at the close of the 21st century has been a shift in the comparative advantage of high-wage countries towards knowledge-based economic activity. An important implication of this shift in this comparative advantage is that much of the production and commercialization of new economic knowledge is less associated with footloose multinational corporations and more associated with high-tech innovative regional clusters, such as Silicon Valley, Research Triangle, and Route 122. Only a few years ago the conventional wisdom predicted that globalization would render the demise of the region as a meaningful unit of economic analysis. Yet the obsession of policy-makers around the globe to “create the next Silicon Valley” reveals the increased importance of geographic proximity and regional agglomerations. The purpose of this paper is to explain why and how geography matters in a globalizing economy, which has resulted in the emergence of the strategic management, not of the firm, but of the Standort, or location.
David B. Audretsch, A. Roy Thurik
7. Living Apart Together in Europe
Abstract
A decade ago Alice Rivlin issued a new book in which she calls for a revival of the American dream that is “a democratic political system in which most people feel that they can affect public decisions and elect officials who will speak for them” (Rivlin 1992: p. 1). The original idea had faded due to a process of centralization. In the early days of dual federalism, both levels of government were relatively small, but the power was with the states (1789–1933). The activities of both government levels expanded during the depression years, but the federal government expanded more than did the states, creating a situation of cooperative federalism (1933–1980). The drive for centralization peaked in the early ′80s and power began to shift back to the states, generating a system of competitive federalism (Shannon and Kee 1989). Rivlin calls for a division of the national and state responsibilities, though two previous attempts to sort these out under the label of new federalism failed (Rivlin 1992: pp. 82–84).
Jean-Pierre van Aubel, K. M. van Nispen
8. The Changing Nature of Regulation: Some Observations from a Southern European Perspective
Abstract
“Regulation” does not mean the same thing on both sides of the Atlantic. In fact, “regulation” does not mean the same thing and does not have the same impact in the legal systems of the countries that today constitute the European Union.
Montserrat Cuchillo
9. Global Trade Sovereignty and Subnational Autonomy
Abstract
Over the past 50 years, and particularly during the past decade, nations have sought to expand international commerce by removing trade barriers, both the physical and procedural variety at border crossings, as well as substantive laws and regulations that restrict equal access of firms in one nation to the markets of another. Any international trade agreement restricts national sovereignty and local autonomy, particularly laws and regulations related to food, agriculture, environment, resource management, health, and economic development. International trade agreements typically seek to remove discrimination between local origin products and services and those from others. Some trade agreements protect local rules through selective exceptions or reservations. It remains to be seen whether the emerging international law undergirding trade will improve or undermine democracy at the state and local levels.
David Eaton
Metadaten
Titel
Globalization and Regionalization
herausgegeben von
David B. Audretsch
Charles F. Bonser
Copyright-Jahr
2002
Verlag
Springer US
Electronic ISBN
978-1-4615-0867-0
Print ISBN
978-1-4613-5278-5
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-0867-0