Informed by fresh empirical analyses, a new generation of models has been developed to test the effectiveness of alternative policies in promoting an inclusive and welfare-enhancing growth, resilient to climate change. Different combinations of macroeconomic and industrial policies have been studied with a focus on the role of mission-oriented programs. Online, user-friendly versions of the models have been released on the project’s website (
https://models.growinpro.eu(s’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre)). Here policymakers, stakeholders, and citizens can test the impact of different policy combinations on macroeconomic variables.
Overall results have been condensed in the policy brief “The GROWINPRO Policy Package for Unleashing Sustainable and Inclusive Growth in the European Union” (
http://www.growinpro.eu/the-growinpro-policy-package-for-unleashing-sustainable-and-inclusive-growth-in-the-european-union-2/(s’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre)).
Main results:
- Do digital technologies represent a new industrial revolution? Not really, the so-called IV-Industrial Revolution shows a lot of elements of continuity with the ICT trajectories.
- What are new patterns of structural change? Past decades were characterised by the rise of the service sector, but even if manufacturing shares are declining, manufacturing productivity growth has the highest contributions to aggregate productivity growth. Such servitization is further accentuated by digitalisation in the manufacturing sector and is negatively impacting upon the labour share along the global value chain.
- What are the sources of new knowledge? Evidence of a worrying neglect of curiosity-driven scientific search in favour of more marketable applied projects, while private firms tend to do less basic research. Tighter appropriation via IPR increases rents, but has ambiguous (possibly negative) effects upon the rates of innovation, as revealed by the paradigmatic example of the development of COVID vaccines.
- What are the sources of productivity growth? The slow productivity growth in Europe is partly explained by a “prolonged creative destruction process” with slow business entry and exit dynamics. Moreover, the weakening of unions and wider dispersion of wages allow “laggard”/low-productivity firms to survive. Servitization is observed as a general tendency, but unrelated to sectoral productivity and employment growth.
- What are the sources of inequalities? Together with a decrease in the labour share, wage inequality is related to an incomplete pass-through of productivity gains to wages, which can be explained by the weakening of institutions aimed at workers ‘protection. Technology adoption does not seem to play a role in wage inequalities within firms. Conversely, the casualization of work, populated by information-based “winner takes almost all” firms, creates new (atypical) form of labour relations that threaten workers’ rights and wages.
- Does technological change lead to unemployment? The ultimate impacts depend on labour market regimes, income distribution and overall demand level, whereby a tighter regulation of the labour market akin to those in place in the sixties protects the economic system from technological unemployment.
Results have been constantly disseminated through various channels: the website, where all the outcomes of the research activity are collected; the social networks (Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn); videos and infographics presenting the major findings; the participation and organisation of meetings and events; the project newsletter. Details on www.growinpro.eu