Impact of Environmental Standards on Sustainable Competitiveness in Foreign Trade. The Case of Poland as a Country in Transition
Streszczenie
From a review of studies published conceming the relationship between
trade and environmental protection, it can be concluded that the effects of this
relationship may be either positive and negative. Generally speaking, two
distinct opinions can be portrayed. The traditional approach is that
environmental standards limit the competitiveness of companies which are
forced to adopt these standards and as a result limit their export potential.
The mare contemporary opinion is that the implementation of appropriate
environmental standards has long-term benefits which should improve the
competitive position of complying companies in the long run.
The goal of the paper is to present the relationships between attainment of
sustainable competitiveness and a systematic implementation of intemational
standards of environmental protection using Poland as a country of systemic
transformation, admitted next to the OECD and applying for admission to the
European Union.
In the 1990s, Poland made a huge effort in pro-ecology policy conducive
to implementing the norms and recommendations of supranational organisations,
mainly the EU, WTO and OECD, which yielded significant changes in
production and foreign trade towards a reduction of the share of products
harmful for the natural environment and imports of technologies supporting
the development of "cleaner" production.
The evaluation covered two basic groups of products in Polish foreign
trade, i.e goods supporting preservation of the natural environment and
goods harmful to the environment. The trends in total Polish exports and
imports as well as in trade with the EU and the OECD were surveyed for both
the groups of products analysed according to the International Hannonised
System (HS) classification.