Skip to main navigation Skip to main content Skip to page footer

Policy Article

How Structural Deficiencies Hamper Estonia’s Catching-up Process (original publication German only)

Authors

  • Schrader
  • K.
  • Laaser
  • C.-F.
  • Benček
  • D.

Publication Date

Key Words

Catching-up

economic development

Economic Structures

Estonia

Reforms

structural change

Related Topics

Innovation and Structural Change

Growth

European Union & Euro

Europe

Estonia is widely regarded as a paramount example for a successful transformation of a socialist economic system to a functioning market economy. Against the backdrop of this positive image which contrasts strongly with the crisis scenarios in Southern Europe the remaining problems of Estonia are often ignored. Estonia has hardly succeeded in catching-up economically with the richer countries of the EU. In this paper the authors raise the question why the catching-up process of Estonia is not as successful as it could have been expected from the policy performance during the last decades. It turns out that Estonia faces a serious productivity problem, particularly in the manufacturing sector producing tradable goods which is normally the driving engine behind economic and technological catching-up. The Estonian economy has failed to undergo the necessary structural change towards technologically more advanced sectoral structures and export patterns. Accordingly, Estonian economic policy needs to create a suitable business environment to support the needed structural change.

Kiel Institute Expert

  • Dr. Klaus Schrader
    Kiel Institute Researcher

More Publications

Subject Dossiers

  • Production site fully automatic with robot arms

    Economic Outlook

  • Inside shoot of the cupola of the Reichstag, the building of the German Bundestag.

    Economic Policy in Germany

  • Colorful flags of European countires in front of an official EU building.

    Tension within the European Union

Research Center

  • Macroeconomics