Cluster Activities in Different Institutional Environments. Case Studies of ICT-Clusters from Austria, Germany, Ukraine and Serbia
Abstract
:1. Introduction and Research Objectives
2. Literature Review
2.1. Clusters and Cluster Policy
2.2. Cluster Associations and Their Activities
2.3. Institutional Environment
3. Research Framework
4. Methodology
5. The Results
5.1. Main Findings from the Case Studies
5.2. Comparative Findings from Cross-Case Synthesis
“One of our leading initiatives is to strengthen the cooperation with the local university aiming to increase the quality of education and knowledge in the area of IT.”(Interview UKR CM, para 47, translated)
“We’re also doing lobbying activities towards the government to enable—to help actually—the government to introduce measurements that will make the life of the companies in the ICT sector easier and more favorable.”(Interview SR CM, para 111)
“He [the cluster manager] has much more contacts in Belgrade in governmental institution than I have.”(Interview SR UN 3, para. 50)
“Yes, yes we are heard. […] we are working also with some government agencies so we do have influence in some parts of the law that is mainly for informatics. And also we are trying to do something about this salary taxes and things.”(Interview SR UN 3, para. 35)
“We are trying to work and approach the cluster development from the perspective like in the theory, from the side of three pillars: business, research and public sector”(Interview AT RI, para 162, translated)
“There is no venture capital in Serbia at all.”(Interview SR CM, para. 175)
“Having a formalized cluster association enables to have a centralized point for capturing information and resources from outside, as well as presenting better the image of the cluster outside”(Interview AT RI, para 279)
6. Final Conclusions
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Interreg IIIC (2006) | Solvell et al. (2005) |
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Parts/Case study | Germany (EU) | Austria (EU) | Ukraine (non-EU) | Serbia (non-EU) |
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I. Institutional context | ||||
Political structure | Federal state with centralized tax system | Federal state with centralized tax system | Centralized governance system | Centralized governance system, but autonomous region |
Institutional Factors 1 | ||||
Getting credit (Cred) 2 | 24 | 52 | 17 | 52 |
Enforcing contracts (EF) 3 | 11 | 6 | 98 | 73 |
Political Transformation (PT) 4 | – | – | 58 (6,10 points) | 21 (7,95 points) |
Economic Transformation (ET) 5 | – | – | 62 (5,68 points) | 29 (7,07 points) |
II. Cluster association | ||||
Established | 2012 | 2013 | 2011 | 2010 |
Rational for establishment/ mission or objectives | Enhance the economic development of the region and the market potential of its member companies | Desire to broaden regional and international opportunities for IT companies and research lefts. Goals:
| Creating the city with suitable conditions attracting national and international IT companies and experts. Goals:
| To create a strong positive influence on social and business environment. Goals:
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Thematic focus | Software sector of ICT | Software sector of ICT | Software sector of ICT | Software sector of ICT |
Scale of cluster | 28 companies | 80–90 companies | 45 companies | 33 companies |
Size of companies | Micro or small companies | Micro and small companies with some global players | Micro or small companies | Micro or small companies; a few are subsidiaries of MNEs |
Cluster origin | Founded as a bottom-up initiative at an IT fair in 2012. No governmental support | Since the 1990s developed from the creation of an impulse left/technological park. The establishment has been promoted by regional Government via re-allocation of the Research Institute and University due to space shortage to the nearby city. | The origin of cluster goes back to 2008, when with support of private Foundation executed by Monitor Group the study on 2 regions with later design of cluster implementation strategy in these regions; through this study this IT cluster has been identified and supported setting the basis for establishment of the association | Founded in 2010 as a bottom-up initiative but supported by international development donors and the Serbian Government. |
Organizational form of cluster | Registered as an association | Cluster association as a juridical institution, which was formed within the bigger formal public/private institution | Cluster association as a juridical institution | Registered as a business association |
Organizational structure (overall) | The cluster is headed by the cluster manager who works on a volunteer basis | The institution has horizontal structure, meaning, implementation of activities is done by project managers and are chaired by CEO | The institution has horizontal and clear structure; Implementation of activities is done by project managers and are chaired by CEO; The cluster is assisted by the team of project managers, PR and communication experts | The cluster is headed by the cluster manager. The cluster manager is supported by a Project Office and an Assistant |
Financing | Membership fee: 100-€/year Sponsors: 1.000€/e. | Membership-fee, additional payment for some of the activities
| Membership-fee, additional payment for some of the activities | Membership fee of 100€/month per Company. Several EU Projects |
III. Bundle of activities (the description of each activity is given in the table listed in Table 3. | ||||
Information & Communication |
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Training and Qualification |
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Co-operation |
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Marketing and PR |
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Access to financing |
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Protection of property rights |
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Political lobbying |
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EU Countries (Germany, Austria) 1 | Non-EU Countries (Ukraine, Serbia) 2 | |
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Institutional Context | ||
Getting credit (Cred) 3 | Germany high, Austria low | Ukraine high, Serbia low |
Enforcing contracts (EF) 4 | Both high | Both Low |
Political Transformation (PT) 5 | Both transformed | Ukraine low, Serbia medium |
Economic Transformation (ET) 6 | Both transformed | Ukraine low, Serbia medium |
Bundles of Activities | ||
Information and communication | In both medium | In both high |
Training and Qualification | Austria | Serbia |
Cooperation | In both high | In both medium |
Marketing & PR | In both low | In both high |
Access to financing | Germany: none Austria: many | Ukraine: none Serbia: many |
Protection of property rights | Both none | Serbia: some; Ukraine: none |
Political lobbying | Both none | Serbia: some; Ukraine: some |
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Konstantynova, A.; Lehmann, T. Cluster Activities in Different Institutional Environments. Case Studies of ICT-Clusters from Austria, Germany, Ukraine and Serbia. Adm. Sci. 2017, 7, 11. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci7020011
Konstantynova A, Lehmann T. Cluster Activities in Different Institutional Environments. Case Studies of ICT-Clusters from Austria, Germany, Ukraine and Serbia. Administrative Sciences. 2017; 7(2):11. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci7020011
Chicago/Turabian StyleKonstantynova, Anastasiia, and Tine Lehmann. 2017. "Cluster Activities in Different Institutional Environments. Case Studies of ICT-Clusters from Austria, Germany, Ukraine and Serbia" Administrative Sciences 7, no. 2: 11. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci7020011
APA StyleKonstantynova, A., & Lehmann, T. (2017). Cluster Activities in Different Institutional Environments. Case Studies of ICT-Clusters from Austria, Germany, Ukraine and Serbia. Administrative Sciences, 7(2), 11. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci7020011