1. The External Economic Factor in the Development of Northwestern Regions: Institutional Support and an Impact Assessment
- Author
-
Pavel Leonidovich Glukhikh, Yuliya G. Myslyakova, Elena Andreeva, and Artem Ratner
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,National Economy ,History ,Handel ,Volkswirtschaftstheorie ,Sociology and Political Science ,Economics ,external economic development factor ,institutional support ,Russia's North-West ,international interregional cooperation ,features of Nordic regions ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Nordeuropa ,Außenwirtschaft ,Northern Europe ,Wirtschaftsentwicklung ,Institutional support ,Russia ,Economic cooperation ,internationale Wirtschaftsbeziehungen ,National economy ,Economic factor ,Regional development ,internationale Zusammenarbeit ,wirtschaftliche Zusammenarbeit ,Russia’s North- West ,Regional science ,ddc:330 ,international economics ,economic development (on national level) ,regionale Entwicklung ,Impact assessment ,international cooperation ,economic cooperation ,Nordic Europe ,Wirtschaft ,lcsh:International relations ,regional development ,commerce ,Russland ,Business ,General Economics, Econometrics and Finance ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,lcsh:JZ2-6530 ,international economic relations - Abstract
This research is warranted, since the Northwestern Federal District accounts for a significant proportion of Russia’s exports. The study aims to reveal the connection between the federal district’s external and internal economic development and to identify the extent to which institutional support for international economic cooperation facilitates brisk international trade. The authors consider international trade from the perspective of its procedural and institutional components. The study stresses dependence between the total international trade and internal economic performance of Russia’s North-West. Another focus is an analysis of institutional support for the development factors and the levels and areas of international economic cooperation. The analysis shows that the Northwestern regions’ external and internal economic development is interdependent and there is considerable support for international cooperation at different levels and in different areas. To a degree, this is explained by the federal district’s geographical position and transport connections, the ‘Nordic’ character of the economy shared by the Russian and neighbouring territories, and the multi-tier nature of the institutional framework for international economic cooperation in the international region.
- Published
- 2018