Intersectoral policy & analysis of its effectiveness

The discipline is rather traditional for our Institute and has absorbed many years of teaching experience and contains ‘honed’ topics and interesting case-tasks for Ukraine.

The purpose of teaching the discipline is to form a set of knowledge in the student on linking the priorities of private business with the interdisciplinary policy of the central and regional government and the important interdisciplinary effects of it for business. This is important for businesses to obtain additional non-corruption benefits in cases of evaluating their own participation & benefit from large or socially significant projects in Ukraine.

The discipline includes two thematic blocks: “Trade policy” & “Public-private partnership and smart specialization”. The main topics are trade policy in the processes of economic development; tariff and non-tariff methods of trade policy; the influence of trade policy on industrial development; public-private partnership as a sphere of implementation of intersectoral development policy; state and municipal management in the field of PPP; smart specialization and its cross-sectoral effects; cluster policy in the world.

Teaching methods to apply: traditional lectures, practical classes with solving case-studies, solving short situational tasks & short exercises in small groups with cross-discussion of intermediate results, seminars in dialogue mode, teleconferences (if distance educational mode is occured), performing individual tasks & finding answers to questions for discussions; field meetings & discussions with leading and experienced representatives of real Ukrainina business (during the several-day final practical part of the ‘module internship’).

Volume of study load: 5 ECTS credits.

  • to form basic knowledge and skills in the field of intersectoral policy analysis, competences in expert-analytical work and assessment of problem situations;
  •  to shape basic knowledge & skills in field of designing some measures of intersectoral policy based on a idea of common interest (or even common good) and coordination of resources and interests of public & private participants, while searching for a better solution in a situation;
  •  to ensure the formation of knowledge & skills in field, in fact, of managing relations in intersectoral policy and interaction with authorities at the strategic & operational levels.
  • WB (2022). World Development Report 2022 : finance for an equitable recovery. URL : https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/bitstream/handle/10986/36883/9781464817304.pdf
  • Balezentis A., Yatsenko O. (2018). Asymmetries of the trade integration of Ukraine and the EU. URL: iepjournal.com/journals/28/2018_2_Basenentius_Yatsenko.pdf (in Ukrainian)
  • Dunayev I., Babaev V. (2010). Trade policy: Education. manual Kharkiv, 132 p. ISBN 978-966-390-053-8. (in Ukrainian)
  • Sectoral integration of Ukraine into the EU: prerequisites, prospects, challenges / Razumkov Center. Kyiv, 2020. 100 p. URL: https://razumkov.org.ua/uploads/article/2021_sektor_eu_ukr.pdf (in Ukrainian)
  • Delmon, J. (2010). Public-private partnership in infrastructure: Practical guidance for public authorities. New York: World Bank, PPIAF, 2010. 165 p. (in Russian)
  • Public-private partnership in the context of public investment management in Ukraine: Evaluation / World Bank in Ukraine. Kyiv: World Bank in Ukraine, 2016. 77 p. (in Ukrainian)
  • Dunayev I. (2019). Clusters and the first strategies of smart specialization for Ukrainian regions: designing transformational changes. URL: http://nbuv.gov.ua/UJRN/dums_2019_1_9 (in Ukrainian)
  • Foray D. (2014). Smart specialization: opportunities and challenges for regional innovation policies. New York-London: Routledge. 104 p.
  • Smart infrastructure in the sustainable development of cities: world experience and prospects of Ukraine. Kyiv : Ruzumkov Foundation, 2021. 400 p.

Tutor

Natalia Stativka

Dr.Sc., full professor

ORCID 0000-0003-0903-6256

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