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EN
The inflow of foreign direct investments (FDI), according to many theories, can be a factor facilitating the processes of regional business convergence. These concepts indicate that FDI not only create additional demand in the internal market, but also contributes to the improvement of the efficiency of domestic entities through the transfer of new technologies and production organization methods. At the same time, there is a group of theories which emphasize the significant role of FDI in deepening spatial disproportions in the level of economic development. This study is an analysis of regional diversity in the inflow of direct foreign investment in Poland in 2003-2008. In particular, the research focuses on settling the issue of whether FDI have reached the least developed provinces and contributed to the reduction of regional development disproportions in Poland, or on the contrary, have been concentrated in regions with a relatively high level of development. The results indicate that the inflow of FDI in Poland in 2003-2008 were spatially-concentrated. The most-developed provinces were the main source of their location, which indicates that FDI could have contributed to the increase in developmental disproportions in Poland.
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EN
Development policy defining trends of changes in Polish economy is the source of many solutions implemented from the top down into economic practice. It also happens around initiatives realized in the area of clusters. The confrontation of program documents and research reports with cluster theory does not give rise to a positive evaluation of this organizational formula in the Polish economic practice. The newly established institution of key national clusters has been integrated into the complex public-private system far from universally accepted theoretical concept of a cluster. The chosen method of selecting key clusters raises serious concerns as it leads to the unauthorized segregation of market operators/participants in the access to public funds.
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