goods from developed countries is increasing. That is, integration
processes do
not reduce the volume of trade between countries, but change its structure
(Mikesell, 1965). The positive impact of integration on the welfare of
developing countries is not limited to production and consumption, but extends
to employment, labor productivity, and population income (Jaber, 1971).
Many researchers, when analyzing the effects of integration for developing
countries, noted wide opportunities for stimulating industrial development
through protectionist measures. In
this regard, the theory of the training field,
based on the idea that for developing countries participating in integration,
relying on the domestic market during the development of industry, is gradually
increasing international competitiveness (Langhammer & Hiemenz, 1990;
Inotai, 1991; Inotai, 1997). This is industrialization based on import substitution
due to high external customs and tariff restrictions. At the same time, financial
and economic integration is a transitional stage, followed by the full inclusion of
the state in the world economy.
In addition to static effects, dynamic integration
effects are essential for
developing countries. They can be identified by dynamic analysis, which
suggests that during the integration patterns of the functioning of the system
change (and therefore, they cannot be traced through static analysis).
It was further established that integration reduces risks and increases
investment growth rates (Brada & Mendez, 1988), which can be explained by
the economies of scale (i.e., increased return on capital under conditions of
market expansion (Corden, 1972). Schiff & Winters (1998) believe that all
factors affecting the medium-term growth rate can be considered dynamic
effects.
The economies of scale play a critical role for developing countries that
need to expand markets and seek to attract investment (Balassa, 1975). In small
markets, costs are higher, fewer opportunities for the development of production
specialization, less competition, which reduces
the motivation of business
entities to improve technologies.
Dynamic effects also include the creation and rejection of investment
flows, studied by many experts (Baldwin et al., 1995; Dunning & Robson, 1988;
Dee & Gali, 2003; Kalotay, 2007). The effect of creating investment flows is
noted when production is transferred to a country participating in an integration
association, where lower costs are due to the absence of barriers to capital flows.
The effect of deviation of investment flows is observed when production is
transferred from a country that is not part of an integration association but
provides lower costs to a country that is a member of integration, which has
higher costs.
Financial and economic integration, as follows from our analysis, has a
positive effect on the economies of countries that are members
of an integration
association, and developing countries can get a more pronounced effect
compared to developed ones. Without denying the importance of the foreign
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trade effects inherent in the initial stages of integration (free trade zone, customs
union), it should be emphasized that in the current conditions, dynamic effects
due to globalization and deepening integration interaction (common market,
common economic space, economic union) are gaining importance.
The French economist Perroux (2007), having studied the relationship
between economic growth and economic development, believed that growth
means a steady increase in the size of the business entity (simple or complex),
achieved through structural and, possibly, systemic transformations, which is
accompanied by economic progress. These transformations have a decisive
effect on development. And development, for its part, promotes growth,
embraces, and supports it.
Thus, it is business entities that act as the main link linking integration and
economic growth. They are the locomotive of integration, strive to achieve the
optimal scale of activity, using, inter alia, cooperation and cooperation with
foreign partners. You can build a sequence of achieving the integration effect:
expanding sales markets → increasing intercountry trade → reorganizing the
production of goods and services → there is a revival in the economy →
increasing investment flows → increasing production of economic entities →
economic growth of the country.
It can be concluded that financial and economic integration, which is a
combination of relations and ties between economic entities that determine the
targeted rapprochement and mutual adaptation of economic systems capable of
self-regulation and
self-development, will certainly lead to economic growth.
For this growth to be sustainable, it is necessary to maintain the integrity of the
economic system, which implies a certain degree of integration.
Thus, financial and economic integration should be understood as a
specific type of concentration in which the effect can be achieved not only
through mergers and acquisitions, but also through a combination of functions,
as well as through a consolidating management mechanism that brings together
the technical, financial, labor potential of interaction individual participants. In
this case, cooperation as a form of economic interaction organically fits into
industrial integration.
The effect of industrial integration consists of the results of financial and
industrial interaction of integration participants and
due to close intersectoral
relations. Based on this, we can distinguish groups of criteria for assessing such
an effect: 1) technological, reflecting the use of resources 2) financial,
characterizing the ratio of costs and profits from the sale of products 3) social,
describing the conditions for the reproduction of labor.
The development and effective operation of integrated associations occurs
under the influence of many factors (Figure 12).
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