ABSTRACT

After years of near ‘disrepute’ in official circles, Industrial Policy has made something of a comeback over the last few years and is now very much back on the agenda at national and EU levels, driven by concerns over globalisation, deindustrialisation, unemployment and perceived poor growth in the EU. Simultaneously, the European Commission’s Fourth Report on Economic and Social Cohesion has kicked off the debate over challenges to cohesion, the shape of EU Cohesion policy beyond 2013, and how resources should be managed. This debate will find added momentum with the imminent ‘mid-term’ review being launched by the Commission. Discussions over the success or not of the Lisbon Agenda, on-going debates over cluster policies, and recent developments in policy evaluation have also contributed to a burgeoning academic literature over the last eighteen months. This edited volume is especially pertinent given such developments and pulls together a diverse range of contributions from leading authorities in the field to add to these debates and to illustrate connections between them.

This book was published as a special issue of Policy Studies.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

Industrial and regional policies in an enlarging EU

chapter 1|14 pages

Evaluating EU Regional Policy

How might we understand the causal connections between interventions and outcomes more effectively?

chapter 2|18 pages

Reforming EU Cohesion Policy

A reappraisal of the performance of the Structural Funds

chapter 4|17 pages

A Cohesion Pact for the Regions

A role for industrial policy?

chapter 5|17 pages

European Industrial and Competition Policy

Perspectives, trends and a new approach

chapter 6|16 pages

Globalisation, Economic Freedom and Strategic Decision-Making

A role for industrial policy?