Marius Constantin

Assistant Professor at the Bucharest University of Economic Studies

Systemic Competitiveness in the EU Cereal Value Chain: A Network Perspective for Policy Alignment


Journal article


Nicolae Istudor, Marius Constantin, Donatella Privitera, Raluca Ignat, Irina-Elena Petrescu, Cristian Teodor
Land, vol. 14(4), 2025, p. 731


DOI
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APA   Click to copy
Istudor, N., Constantin, M., Privitera, D., Ignat, R., Petrescu, I.-E., & Teodor, C. (2025). Systemic Competitiveness in the EU Cereal Value Chain: A Network Perspective for Policy Alignment. Land, 14(4), 731. https://doi.org/10.3390/land14040731


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Istudor, Nicolae, Marius Constantin, Donatella Privitera, Raluca Ignat, Irina-Elena Petrescu, and Cristian Teodor. “Systemic Competitiveness in the EU Cereal Value Chain: A Network Perspective for Policy Alignment.” Land 14, no. 4 (2025): 731.


MLA   Click to copy
Istudor, Nicolae, et al. “Systemic Competitiveness in the EU Cereal Value Chain: A Network Perspective for Policy Alignment.” Land, vol. 14, no. 4, 2025, p. 731, doi:10.3390/land14040731.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{nicolae2025a,
  title = {Systemic Competitiveness in the EU Cereal Value Chain: A Network Perspective for Policy Alignment},
  year = {2025},
  issue = {4},
  journal = {Land},
  pages = {731},
  volume = {14},
  doi = {10.3390/land14040731},
  author = {Istudor, Nicolae and Constantin, Marius and Privitera, Donatella and Ignat, Raluca and Petrescu, Irina-Elena and Teodor, Cristian}
}

Abstract


 This research explores the systemic nature of competitiveness within the cereal sector of the European Union (EU) and addresses the structural interdependencies among key competitiveness drivers through a network-based model. The goal of this research is to offer policy alignment solutions based on the empirical findings derived from a sparse Gaussian graphical model that was operationalized to identify conditional dependencies, synergies, and decouplings across five dimensions: factor endowments, self-sufficiency, trade strategy, resource productivity, and environmental impact. The results showed systemic vulnerabilities, including the decoupling of factor endowments from strategic trade specialization, a pronounced East–West productivity divide, and the asymmetry between the economic valorization of harvested land and its environmental impact, reflected in land management practices. Research findings underscore the need for synergy-driven strategies to coherently align agricultural competitiveness outcomes with the economic and structural potential of each EU country. A critical policy incongruency has been identified: the current prioritization of ecological performance under the Common Agricultural Policy overlooks essential agricultural infrastructural disparities, thereby perpetuating competitiveness asymmetries across the Union. In response, this study introduces a systemic amelioration framework designed to reconcile environmental priorities with agricultural infrastructure development, fostering cohesive and resilient competitiveness throughout the EU cereal sector.