Inside Oligarchs versus Outside India: Technical (non)progress and environmental effects in Post-Soviet Steel

Authors: Troschke, Manuela; Wittmann, Florian
Year of Publication: 2014
Type: Working Paper
Title of series: IOS Policy Issues
Place: Institute for East and Southeast European Studies, Regensburg


Abstract
The recent case of the Ilva Steelworks in Italy demonstrates that outdated technology in steel production can persist and respective environmental damage can occur if economic and political interests that stick to an overcome developmental model collude. Steel played also a prominent role for economic development of the Soviet Union, but over decades under the plan mechanism a pronounced technological backwardness of the sector evolved. Despite privatization, trade liberalization and rising prices for input goods since transition, backwardness persists till now and environmental damage caused by the sector is a serious concern. Our article examines technical (non)progress in the steel sector of Russia, Ukraine and Kazakhstan and looks at the explanatory factors for backwardness, with a special focus on ownership. To overcome the locked-in situation, we propose that EU anti-dumping investigations and trade agreements should take into account a broader range of potential subsidies and include environmental factors alike.

Cite this

Troschke, Manuela; Wittmann, Florian (2014): "Inside Oligarchs versus Outside India: Technical (non)progress and environmental effects in Post-Soviet Steel". IOS Policy Issues. Institute for East and Southeast European Studies, Regensburg.
TY  - GEN
TI  - Inside Oligarchs versus Outside India: Technical (non)progress and environmental effects in Post-Soviet Steel
T2  - IOS Policy Issues
AU  - Troschke, Manuela
AU  - Wittmann, Florian
CY  - Institute for East and Southeast European Studies, Regensburg
PY  - 2014
UR  - http://www.dokumente.ios-regensburg.de/publikationen/policy_issue/policy_issue_1.pdf
IS  - 1
AB  - The recent case of the Ilva Steelworks in Italy demonstrates that outdated technology in steel production can persist and respective environmental damage can occur if economic and political interests that stick to an overcome developmental model collude. Steel played also a prominent role for economic development of the Soviet Union, but over decades under the plan mechanism a pronounced technological backwardness of the sector evolved. Despite privatization, trade liberalization and rising prices for input goods since transition, backwardness persists till now and environmental damage caused by the sector is a serious concern. Our article examines technical (non)progress in the steel sector of Russia, Ukraine and Kazakhstan and looks at the explanatory factors for backwardness, with a special focus on ownership. To overcome the locked-in situation, we propose that EU anti-dumping investigations and trade agreements should take into account a broader range of potential subsidies and include environmental factors alike.
ER  - 
@MISC{
  title = "Inside Oligarchs versus Outside India: Technical (non)progress and environmental effects in Post-Soviet Steel",
  series = "IOS Policy Issues",
  author = "Troschke, Manuela and Wittmann, Florian",
  url = "http://www.dokumente.ios-regensburg.de/publikationen/policy_issue/policy_issue_1.pdf",
  location = "Institute for East and Southeast European Studies, Regensburg",
  year = "2014",
  abstract = "The recent case of the Ilva Steelworks in Italy demonstrates that outdated technology in steel production can persist and respective environmental damage can occur if economic and political interests that stick to an overcome developmental model collude. Steel played also a prominent role for economic development of the Soviet Union, but over decades under the plan mechanism a pronounced technological backwardness of the sector evolved. Despite privatization, trade liberalization and rising prices for input goods since transition, backwardness persists till now and environmental damage caused by the sector is a serious concern. Our article examines technical (non)progress in the steel sector of Russia, Ukraine and Kazakhstan and looks at the explanatory factors for backwardness, with a special focus on ownership. To overcome the locked-in situation, we propose that EU anti-dumping investigations and trade agreements should take into account a broader range of potential subsidies and include environmental factors alike.",
  number = "1",
}