Konwergencja wojewódzkich wskaźników ładu społecznego
Abstract
The subject of convergence became popular in Poland upon its accession to the EU in 2004.
On one hand, according to some politicians and economists, convergence is an expected outcome
of integration, while, on the other hand, numerous research studies cast doubt on the effectiveness
of the cohesion policy. The doubts are mainly based on two facts: the inability of supported regions
to grow on their own after external assistance ceases to be provided and the presence
of evidence confirming that interregional cohesion, being a standard until the late 1970s, does not
occur anymore. Those facts pertain to economic convergence, verified on the basis of economic
activity measures – it is most frequently the GDP per capita. However, the cohesion policy, carried
out within the framework of the EU regional policy, has broader aspects: economic, social, and
territorial (spatial) ones. While the economic aspect is a very thoroughly researched area of convergence
studies, the social aspects are less often covered by specialist literature. It is that issue
that is raised in this paper in which, instead of separate measures of social convergence, the synthetic
measures of social cohesion of Polish provinces are presented.
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