Browse Our Business and Economics Journals

Economics and business journals focus on publishing papers coming from the fields of applied economics, corporate finance, financial investments, markets, institutions, industrial organization, international trade, marketing and similar.

Business and Economics

You are looking at 1 - 2 of 2 items for :

  • P: Political Economy and Comparative Economic Systems x
  • Refine by Access: All Content x
Clear All

Abstract

This paper, using the OECD DAC's ODA (Official Development Assistance) database and UN Comtrade's trade data, empirically demonstrates that donor countries can utilize development aid as an instrument to build stable trade relationships and expand trade with recipient countries by strategically directing aid to targeted recipients. The empirical results indicate that a bilateral donor-recipient pair is more likely to establish a stable trade relationship and experience greater growth in bilateral trade flows than in the absence of such aid. The effects of aid on trade stability persist across various settings: whether the trade type is export or import, whether the traded goods are final or intermediate, and whether the aid is provided as loans or grants. The impacts of aid on fostering bilateral trade growth are also significant. Particularly, concessional loans are far more effective than grants in promoting donor-recipient trade growth, especially in stimulating the recipient's imports from the donor. These findings suggest that donor countries can leverage development aid as a strategic measure to mitigate the risk of global supply chain disruptions and secure overseas export markets during external trade shocks, such as the global financial crisis and the COVID-19 pandemic.

Restricted access

Abstract

The paper employs a cross-sectional data set comprising the main dimensions of the European Union's International Digital Economy and Society Index (I-DESI) and utilises grouping methods based on objective weights to evaluate the relative digital readiness of Hungary and other Central and Eastern European (CEE) member states of the EU. The objective was not to establish a total ordering (ranking) of the countries in the data set, but rather to identify the most appropriate means of grouping the CEE countries into homogeneous units, utilising multivariate statistical and decision-theoretical techniques (tiered DEA, partially ordered sets and clustering). Despite the disparate methodologies employed, the findings are consistent in that the CEE countries (including Hungary) exhibit a general resemblance to one another and demonstrate comparatively lower levels of digital readiness than Northern and Western European countries. The notable exception is Estonia, which exhibits a distinctive level of digital advancement.

Open access