Abstract
Being competitive in the international agri-food trade is an important aim of every country. It should be noted that this term has neither a commonly accepted definition nor a synthetized index to quantify it. The most commonly used indices in the international literature are the Balassa index and its modified versions (revealed trade advantage, revealed competitiveness, normalized revealed comparative advantage, and revealed symmetric comparative advantage) and different export and/or import-related indices (e.g., the Grubel–Lloyd index or the trade balance index). Based on a systematic review of the literature, these measurements were identified along with the major factors suggested for higher agri-food trade competitiveness. It seems that supportive legislation and/or (trade) policy is the most crucial factor, followed by higher value-added/more sophisticated goods, and high, efficient, and profitable production. Although the EU and its member states were overrepresented in the analyzed literature, the candidate countries, as well as other important trading partners of the EU, e.g., Canada, China, or the ASEAN countries, were also analyzed. Thus, some of these findings may be generalized.
Highlights
Competitiveness: A Review of the Competitiveness is a key element of the market economy regardless of the sector concerned
Balassa provided the theoretical background of comparative advantages, as well as the empirical verification of it [2]
The revealed comparative advantage (RCA), or Balassa, index is regularly used by researchers all over the world (Abbreviations contains the main abbreviations used in the text)
Summary
Competitiveness: A Review of the Competitiveness is a key element of the market economy regardless of the sector concerned. The term itself has undergone significant changes but there is still not a commonly accepted definition or synthetized index. Adam Smith’s absolute advantage (cheaper production) was one of the first abstractions, followed by Ricardo’s comparative advantage (price and cost differences), and the term was finetuned by Heckscher and. Ohlin based on efficiency [1]. Balassa provided the theoretical background of comparative advantages, as well as the empirical verification of it [2]. The revealed comparative advantage (RCA), or Balassa, index is regularly used by researchers all over the world (Abbreviations contains the main abbreviations used in the text).
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