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Evolutionary Economic Policy and Competitiveness
in: Kurt Dopfer, Richard R. Nelson, Jason Potts, Andreas Pyka, Routledge Handbook of Evolutionary Economics
This paper advances a dynamic rationale for competitiveness policy that focuses on an economy's ability to evolve in order
to achieve high real incomes along with desired qualitative changes in the socio-economic system. It highlights that the ubiquitous
"rationalities of failure", either of markets, governments, or systems, are rooted in a peculiar habit of accepting hypothetical
perfect states as normative benchmarks. In contrast, competitiveness policy starts from the objectives that the system wants
to achieve. By combining the structuralist ontology of the micro, meso and macro levels of development with the basic system
functions of evolutionary change, a general typology is developed that differentiates, organizes, and integrates various economic
policies according to their respective contributions to the evolvability of the system. Among other advantages, the proposed
concept of competitiveness policy allows (i) to replace the negative "logic of failure" with the active pursuit of dynamic
development goals, (ii) to break the ideologically afflicted dichotomy between "vertical" and "horizontal" policies and (iii)
to better align the theoretical rationale with the actual perception of the societal purpose of public interventions by most
policy agents.
JEL-Codes:B52, L52, L53, O11, O12, O43
Keywords:Evolutionary economics, Competitiveness, Structural change, Policy classification, Evolutionary economic policy
Forschungsbereich:Industrie-, Innovations- und internationale Ökonomie
Sprache:Englisch