• Consultancy
    capability               
  • Economic
    intelligence services                 
  • Knowledge Base   

    Access the extensive range of economic analysis, data and forecasts for all our subscription services.
  • Econometrics
    training                 
  • Suite of economic models                  
  • Press releases
  • About
    Cambridge
    Econometrics        
  • Labour markets
    Video about partnership with local agencies
  • Search this site
Cambridge Econometrics
Connecting you to the future

Projects carried out by our company

Cambridge Econometrics regularly undertakes research for the European Commission, in particular Eurostat and DG Regional Policy. To promote wider dissemination of this work, we make available the final reports of the research projects where permission has been granted by the client commissioning the work. What follows is a brief description of the project and, if available, a downloadable file in Word and/or pdf format.

Project: Analysis of the Main Factors of Regional Growth: An in-depth study of the best and worst performing European regions
Client: DG Regio
Date: January 2008


In recent years, Governments across Europe have been adopting a more regional approach to economic policy. At the centre of this approach is the challenge of designing policies that are appropriate at the local level To some degree, the regionalisation of economic policy is a recognition that regional disparities differ across. However, the determinants of growth at the regional level are hard to identify, making the design of effective policy difficult. However, the determinants of growth at the regional level are hard to identify – making the design of effective policy difficult. Many of the studies already in the field suffer from problems of poor data availability and the endogeneity of many explanatory variables – both of which make conducting empirically sound work difficult.This four-year study seeks to bring together the three aspects of policy, theory and observation to help deepen the understanding of how they link together and how those regions that have performed relatively poorly can improve and learn from those that have done relatively well.


 

Project: DG Regio Third Cohesion Report
Client: DG Regio
Date: February 2004


This major project for DG Regio provided a chapter in the European Union's 2003 Cohesion Report, the EU's review of the state of European regional development, together with analysis to support other parts of the report. The work involved five main tasks. The first was a survey of the literature on regional competitiveness to help establish a framework for the analysis and identify and provide links between driving factors, policy instruments, and key indicators. The second task was to develop a time series databank with consistent and coherent indicators of regional development, covering all current member states at NUTS 2 level and many of the candidate countries at Level 2. Tasks 3 and 4 covered data and econometric analysis, respectively. The data analysis applied non-technical methods to present the data and draw associations between output and input indicators, while the econometric modelling was applied to test these conclusions more robustly. Task 5 comprised a series of case studies designed to capture the qualitative aspects of competitive factors, including for example institutional issues, for which numerical indicators could not be included in the time series database.

 

Official Cohesion Report
http://europa.eu.int/

Supporting research
Factors Underlying Regional Competitiveness PDF format 2Mb


 

Project: DG Enterprise Competitiveness Report 2003
Client: DG Enterprise
Date: 12 November, 2003


This project for DG Enterprise, in collaboration with the Wifo Institute in Vienna, provided a chapter in its annual series of reports on the state of European competitiveness. The work performed by Cambridge Econometrics centred around regional competitiveness and involved three main tasks. The first was a survey of the literature on regional competitiveness to help establish a framework for the analysis. Tasks 2 covered the application of non-technical methods to present the data and draw associations between output and input indicators, while Task 3 (econometric modelling) was applied to test these conclusions more robustly.

Downloadable file:
http://europa.eu.int/comm/enterprise/enterprise_policy/competitiveness/


 

Project: Analysis of Regional Data on Gross Value Added (GVA)
Client: Eurostat
Report Date: September 2000


This project contributed to one of the pillars of work being undertaken by Eurostat task forces. These address the consistency and comparability of regional measures across EU member states in regional GDP, population, unemployment and employment. The principal aim of the research was to explore evidence for systematic changes over time in the structure of regional GVA (ie the shares of the regions in national GVA). The work analysed structure at different levels in the hierarchy of Regio NUTS datasets, and their associated characteristics (eg urban/rural, fast/slow growing population). Univariate statistical models were used to assess the significance/existence of trends in the structural data. The results were presented to the annual meeting of the Regional Accounts Working Party in Luxembourg.

Downloadable file:
Microsoft Word format 3Mb
PDF Format 4M


 

Project: Regional Competitiveness Indicators
Client: European Commission (DG XVI Regional Policies)
Report Date: September 1998


This project established a set of economic indicators currently available for the NUTS 2 regions of the EU and tested their ability to explain observed differences in growth in per capita incomes among the regions. The analysis distinguished indicators that might be influenced by regional policy (eg infrastructure, education and health) from those over which policy has less influence (eg industrial structure, peripherality, R&D activity). Econometric analysis was used to test the relationship between the values of the various indicators and the actual growth experience of the regions. Finally, the scale of the influence of the various factors was shown by undertaking ‘what if’ scenarios in which a given indicator was set to the European average value for each region (eg ‘what if Scotland were less peripheral than it actually is?’). This work was funded by the European Commission and served as a key input to their Sixth Periodic Report on the Regions.

Downloadable file:
Zipped Microsoft Word Document 648kb


Papers presented at conferences by our economists

3rd party research based on data provided by Cambridge Econometrics


 

For further information, including prices, and to order the service, email:
Sadia Sheikh
Manager, European Regional Service

 

 

 

 

 

Cambridge Econometrics, Covent Garden, Cambridge CB1 2HS, UK
Tel: +44 (0)1223 460760 Fax: +44 (0)1223 464378