J 2023

INDICATORS OF GOVERNMENT EFFECTIVENESS IN EUROPEAN COUNTRIES: EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS WITH THE USE OF PANEL DATA

HALASKOVA, Martina; Veronika LINHARTOVÁ; Beata GAVUROVA and Peter NIRODA

Basic information

Original name

INDICATORS OF GOVERNMENT EFFECTIVENESS IN EUROPEAN COUNTRIES: EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS WITH THE USE OF PANEL DATA

Authors

HALASKOVA, Martina; Veronika LINHARTOVÁ (203 Czech Republic, guarantor, belonging to the institution); Beata GAVUROVA and Peter NIRODA

Edition

TRANSFORMATIONS IN BUSINESS & ECONOMICS, 2023, 1648-4460

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Article in a journal

Field of Study

50202 Applied Economics, Econometrics

Country of publisher

Lithuania

Confidentiality degree

is not subject to a state or trade secret

References:

Impact factor

Impact factor: 1.800

Organization unit

AMBIS University

UT WoS

001073534400016

Keywords (in Czech)

vládní efektivnost, indikátory, veřejné výdaje, hodnocení, země EU, tranzitivní ekonomiky, netranzitivní ekonomiky, panelová data

Keywords in English

government effectiveness;indicators;public expenditures;evaluation;EU countries;transition economies;non-transition economies;panel data

Tags

Tags

International impact, Reviewed
Changed: 2/4/2024 16:01, Ing. Kateřina Lendrová

Abstract

In the original language

Based on a theoretical and empirical approach, the authors strive to evaluate government effectiveness according to the government effectiveness index and the impact of selected (socio-economic) indicators on government effectiveness in European countries in the years 2003-2019. The research examines the position of European countries (EU-27 and the United Kingdom) and focuses on the specification of determinants in transition economies and non-transition economies. The highest government effectiveness in 2003-2019 is observed in Scandinavian countries, whereas the lowest government effectiveness was found in two examples of transition economies, Romania and Bulgaria. Panel data analysis was used for the analysis, specifically the Fixed effects model. The results of the analysis demonstrate the impact of the observed determinants on government effectiveness in transition economies (model 1) and in non-transition economies (model 2). The most significant determiners to affect government effectiveness are GDP per capita and government expenditures on public services in both models (despite a different structure in transition and non-transition economies). Other factors that have a major effect on government effectiveness in transition economies are parliamentary seats held by women, the corruption perception index, and the percentage of women in the position of senior administrators. Our findings can be beneficial for public policymakers in the implementation of government measures and as a basis for changes in the leadership of individual governments leading to increased efficiency.