WHAT REGION IN THE ARCTIC HAS THE BEST CONDITIONS FOR THE IMPLEMENTATION OF REGIONAL INDUSTRIAL POLICY MEASURES?

This article addresses the research question concerning the assessment of current prerequisites for implementing industrial policy within the Arctic territories of Russia through the efforts of local and regional authorities. The research goal required solving methodological problems, including how...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Север и рынок: формирование экономического порядка
Main Authors: Alexandr N. Pilyasov, Vyacheslav A. Tsukerman
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Russian
Published: The Russian Academy of Sciences, Federal Research Centre Kola Science Centre 2023
Subjects:
H
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.37614/2220-802X.3.2023.81.002
https://doaj.org/article/f6134d86e0fd46798ab77622f237585c
Description
Summary:This article addresses the research question concerning the assessment of current prerequisites for implementing industrial policy within the Arctic territories of Russia through the efforts of local and regional authorities. The research goal required solving methodological problems, including how to evaluate these prerequisites, analytical problems encompassing individual and integrated scoring, and practical problems such as the differentiation of Arctic territories into responsive, neutral, or conservative regarding regional industrial policy measures. The study is based on regional and municipal statistical indicators, legal documents outlining industrial policy within Arctic regions, and data from the monthly monitoring of the Arctic conducted by the Institute of Regional Consulting. To perform an integrated assessment of the conditions, we employed 17 indicators grouped into five categories: 1) material factors (four indicators reflecting the volume and weight of the industrial sector in the regional economy); 2) spatial factors (four indicators assessing the degree of dispersion or concentration of regional industry locations); 3) technological factors (three indicators measuring the Arctic territory’s readiness for the fifth Kondratieff wave); 4) institutional factors (three indicators evaluating the involvement of key actors in industrial activities, the effectiveness of industrial partnerships, and the presence of established regional industrial policy institutions); 5) natural resource factors (three indicators offering a qualitative assessment of the region’s key resource assets). Upon integrating individual scores for five categories, which were derived as the arithmetic mean of normalized scores, four distinct groups of regions were identified. The first group, represented by the Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug (YNAO) and the Krasnoyarsk Arctic, has the most favorable conditions for the deployment of new industrial policy measures. The second group, consisting of the well-established industrial ...