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REGIONAL COOPERATION AND ECONOMIC INTEGRATION

REGIONAL COOPERATION AND ECONOMIC INTEGRATION

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<strong>REGIONAL</strong> TRADE AGREEMENTS <strong>AND</strong> <strong>REGIONAL</strong> <strong>COOPERATION</strong><br />

3. Monitoring and evaluation – an alternative method<br />

3.1. International rankings and the Relative Total Performance<br />

There are several experiments to use composite indices for measuring development<br />

(Bandura, 2005). We have tried to make a selection from the worldwide available and<br />

most widely used various rankings so that we are able to cover as many aspects of socialeconomic<br />

and environmental development as possible. We believe that the global picture<br />

drawn by the results of the individual rankings is suitable to assess and compare the<br />

development level of the Balkan and East Central European region respectively, while<br />

offering an exciting opportunity to compare the results of different types of development<br />

analysis (Adamecz et al, 2008). On the one hand it allows the drawing of conclusions<br />

about the relative situation about the country by way of a simultaneous examination of<br />

several aspects; on the other hand the particular indicators arising from the statistical<br />

and questionnaire based surveys used for the individual rankings provide a detailed image<br />

of the social and economic situation and allows deeper comparisons. In our presentation<br />

we will endeavour to cover both areas (Gáspár, 2008a).<br />

However, in order to handle the findings in a uniform way and to describe the overall<br />

situation we will take into consideration that the rankings first of all reflect the Euro-<br />

Atlantic perspective and judgement but they allow a wider scope of evaluation of the<br />

state of development of some Balkan and East Central European countries together with<br />

their respective post-Lisbon Strategy development opportunities than the Lisbon<br />

indicators or Eurostat’s index system of sustainable development.<br />

One of the main difficulties of drawing the global image stems from the fact that the<br />

international rankings have been created for a highly varying number of countries and<br />

even the set of countries chosen for the individual rankings were of a highly diverse nature.<br />

The social and economic image resulting from the particular indicators is not confused by<br />

that, however, the overview, which takes into consideration several aspects simultaneously,<br />

the group of countries involved in the examination had to be standardised. A too narrow<br />

group of countries (e.g. regional or sub-regional groups such as the Visegrád countries)<br />

would have excluded worldwide comparisons and the exploration of the central/peripheral<br />

situations. At the same time we did not want to expand the group to include the greatest<br />

number of countries present in all rankings because it would have distorted the picture<br />

since the individual aspects of development do not change in a linear fashion from country<br />

to country but there is a greater density thereof in the first third of the ranking lists. As a<br />

consequence the wide spectrum would have obliterated the qualitative differences between<br />

the developed and the quasi developed countries.<br />

Therefore in the first instance we included 30 countries of OECD in our research, to<br />

which we added 5 countries invited to be a full member of the organisation - Chile,<br />

Estonia, Israel, Russia and Slovenia - as well as 5 potential members that OECD pay a<br />

special attention to, namely Brazil, China, India, Indonesia and South Africa. We have also<br />

included in the circle those EU countries which are not OECD members as well as the<br />

neighbouring and the South-Eastern European countries for a regional comparability.<br />

From the latter we have excluded Albania and Moldova due to the great extent to which<br />

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