Rodyti trumpą aprašą

dc.contributor.authorBanelienė, Rūta
dc.date.accessioned2023-09-18T16:13:12Z
dc.date.available2023-09-18T16:13:12Z
dc.date.issued2022
dc.identifier.issn2084-0845
dc.identifier.urihttps://etalpykla.vilniustech.lt/handle/123456789/112434
dc.description.abstractAll countries of the European Union (EU) have had their economies impacted by COVID-19 and should focus their efforts on managing the negative impacts on their GDP growth. Since EU countries vary considerably in many criteria, the same policy would not fit all EU countries. This paper analyzes how sustainable economic growth could be maintained in the long run while considering three criteria, including R&D investment, gross value added per employee and country size by population; and which factors could have the highest impacts on economic growth in the recovery process according to supply and demand. Countries were examined according to the mentioned criteria by applying the panel least squares method. The major estimation outputs show the stronger effect of the supply side on economic growth, the higher role of human capital in small EU countries where R&D investment exceeds 3% of GDP, and the critical effect of exports on GDP growth in the large EU countries with the lowest R&D investment. This segment depends the most on smooth exports of goods and service flows and could be the most vulnerable under COVID-19 conditions. Therefore, seeking to keep economic growth on track, EU countries should use different strategies and fiscal measures depending on the most vulnerable factors for their economic growth. In addition, this is the right time to revise values of economic growth, and governments should be more focused on the recovery of their economies on the sustainable development goals (SDGs) agenda.eng
dc.formatPDF
dc.format.extentp. 121-134
dc.format.mediumtekstas / txt
dc.language.isoeng
dc.relation.isreferencedbyEmerging Sources Citation Index (Web of Science)
dc.relation.isreferencedbyScopus
dc.relation.isreferencedbyIndex Copernicus
dc.source.urihttp://we.vizja.pl/en/download-pdf/volume/16/issue/1/id/681
dc.titleSustainable economic growth in the European Union under COVID-19 conditions
dc.typeStraipsnis Web of Science DB / Article in Web of Science DB
dcterms.accessRightsThis work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
dcterms.licenseCreative Commons – Attribution – 4.0 International
dcterms.references59
dc.type.pubtypeS1 - Straipsnis Web of Science DB / Web of Science DB article
dc.contributor.institutionVilniaus Gedimino technikos universitetas
dc.contributor.facultyMechanikos fakultetas / Faculty of Mechanics
dc.subject.researchfieldS 004 - Ekonomika / Economics
dc.subject.researchfieldS 003 - Vadyba / Management
dc.subject.researchfieldT 007 - Informatikos inžinerija / Informatics engineering
dc.subject.studydirectionE10 - Gamybos inžinerija / Production and manufacturing engineering
dc.subject.studydirectionJ01 - Ekonomika / Economics
dc.subject.vgtuprioritizedfieldsEV02 - Aukštos pridėtinės vertės ekonomika / High Value-Added Economy
dc.subject.ltspecializationsL103 - Įtrauki ir kūrybinga visuomenė / Inclusive and creative society
dc.subject.enGDP growth
dc.subject.enEuropean Union countries
dc.subject.enR&D investment
dc.subject.enemployment
dc.subject.enexports
dcterms.sourcetitleContemporary economics
dc.description.issueiss. 1
dc.description.volumevol. 16
dc.publisher.nameUniversity of Economics and Human Sciences in Warsaw
dc.publisher.cityWarsaw
dc.identifier.doi000743253400007
dc.identifier.doi10.5709/ce.1897-9254.472
dc.identifier.elaba116545110


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