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Evgeny Vinokurov

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Evgeny Vinokurov
BornOctober 6, 1975 (age 48–49)
NationalityRussian
Scientific career
FieldsEconomics
InstitutionsEurasian Fund for Stabilization and Development
Notes
Vinokurov's personal website at http://www.vinokurov.info

Vinokurov, Evgeny (born 1975, Kaliningrad) is an economist, Chief Economist at the Eurasian Fund for Stabilization and Development (EFSD).[1] His research is in macro- and microeconomics, regional integration, global financial and economic architecture and international organizations.

He was educated at the universities of Kaliningrad, Göttingen, Grenoble and Moscow. He holds a Ph.D. (doktor nauk) in economy from the Institute of World Economy and International Relations (IMEMO) of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow; and a Ph.D. from Pierre Mendes-France University (Grenoble II). After several years of experience in applied economy research projects at the Centre for European Policy Studies (CEPS), Catholic University of Leuven and the University of Jena he proceeded to working with the Eurasian Development Bank (EDB), being responsible for macro- and microeconomic analysis in particular, as well as the development bank's nascent research program.

Founding director of the EDB Centre for Integration Studies since 2011 until 2018. Over these years, EDB Centre for Integration Studies has become the leading analytical center dealing with Eurasian integration issues. Under Vinokurov’s guidance, the Centre published 50 reports[2] on such issues as macroeconomics, investments, trade, cross-border infrastructure, labour migration and remittances, and the public perception of integration. All of the Centre’s reports are publicly available, open-access resources.[3]

Since 2018 Vinokurov is the Chief Economist[4] of the Eurasian Fund for Stabilization and Development, a regional financing arrangement with six member states and $9 bln financial resources. The EFSD primarily provides budget and balance of payment support loans as well as large-scale infrastructure investment loans to its member states. The nascent Chief Economist Group[5] provides research in macro- and microeconomic issues with the focus on macroeconomic stability, fiscal sustainability, and debt sustainability of the EFSD member states. It also covers global and regional economic trends and various issues related to the global economic and financial architecture.

Vinokurov is the author and editor of 19 books,[6][7] and a member of such professional bodies as International Studies Association and the American Economic Association. Professor of the Russian Academy of Sciences. Member of the Russian Council for International Affairs.

Academic Interests

He devoted several years to studying enclaves and exclaves. The main research findings are reflected in the books "A Theory of Enclaves",[8] "Kaliningrad: Enclaves and Economic Integration",[9] and "Adapting to European Integration? The Case of the Russian Exclave Kaliningrad".[10] "A Theory of Enclaves" was also published in Russian.[11] The study is built on the analysis of an extensive database that covers over 280 enclaves and exclaves. Enclaves are a fairly frequent phenomenon. The role of the enclaves as a generator of conflicts between motherland and surrounding states (e.g., Britain and Spain in the case of Gibraltar, Russia and the European Union in the case of Kaliningrad, Spain and Morocco in the case of Ceuta and Melilla) is of particular interest. A theory of enclaves provides the answers to two fundamental questions: what factors determine the enclaves' sovereign belonging (ethnic composition of the population) and what economic policies can ensure their successful sustainable economic development (economic openness).

Starting in 2003, Vinokurov has actively been engaged in studying economic and political integration. His interest in the Russian-European vector led to the publication of the book "The CIS, the EU, and Russia: The Challenges of Integration".[12] Since 2006, while working in the EDB, Vinokurov focused on the issues of economic integration in the post-Soviet space and Eurasia. In 2007 Vinokurov became the Editorial Board member of the International Journal of Economic Policy in Emerging Economies.[13] In 2008 he launched and became the editor of the EDB Eurasian Integration Yearbook (in English) and the quarterly research and analytical Journal of Eurasian Economic Integration (in Russian), published by the EDB until 2013 and 2015, respectively.

In 2009 he headed the international research group and published the EDB System of Indicators for the Eurasian Integration (SIEI),[14] a complex system of comprehensive monitoring of statistics and dynamics of regional integration in the CIS region with the use of a specialized economic toolkit. This book introduced and quantitatively grounded the concept of the "integration core" in the post-Soviet space. Together with A. Libman he also developed a theory of holding-together regionalism to explain the patterns of regional re-integration processes (relevant for the explanation of integration patterns not only in the post-Soviet space but also in Africa and some other regions).[15]

His research focused on integration processes on the Eurasian continent, spanning the European Union, the Eurasian Economic Union, Central Asia, Eastern Asia, and South Asia. Thus, his research differentiates itself by the continental scope, covering the fastest growing regions of the world and concentrating on the emerging economic and political linkages in Eurasia, which have not been studied in depth before. In a nutshell, it provides a coherent view of Eurasian continental integration. The concept of Eurasian continental integration was the subject of the book "Eurasian Integration: Challenges of Transcontinental Regionalism", written together with A. Libman several years before it became mainstream.[16]

Up to now, Eurasian integration has primarily developed from the bottom-up, as intergovernmental cooperation is lagging behind the development of economic linkages. Vinokurov argues that cooperation in Eurasia should not (and could not) encompass all countries of the continent: rather, it should be based on multiple overlapping integration projects involving governments, sub-national and supranational institutions. The presence of several centers of power - the EU, China, India, Russia, as a center of attraction of the former Soviet Union, and Turkey, as an emerging leader of the Islamic West Asia, makes the emergence of a single continental integration organization of a supranational nature very unlikely. A network structure of integration, a so-called "spaghetti bowl" of various kinds of multilateral agreements aimed at solving specific problems, is much more probable. Eurasian integration could drive development by integrating energy trade, non-energy trade and transport, capital and labour flows, tourism, and fighting against drug trading and the spread of epidemics. Vinokurov further argues that open regionalism in Eurasia is an economically optimal supplement to regional integration initiatives, in particular to post-Soviet integration.

His 2017 book, "Re-Evaluating Regional Organizations: Behind the Smokescreen of Official Mandates",[17] was also co-authored with A. Libman and published by Palgrave Macmillan. It introduces the new database of 62 regional organizations with up to 130 various parameters for each one of them. This monograph pursues two research questions: first, why do regional organizations demonstrate such remarkable resilience even when they do not achieve their declared goals? Second, what factors actually determine the goal-setting and how do they evolve over the life of the regional organization?

His most recent book, “Introduction to the Eurasian Economic Union”,[18] was published by Palgrave Macmillan in 2018. It represents a concise survey of various aspects of the functioning of the EAEU – from its history and institutions to the analysis of the common markets and the external economic relations.

Participation in International Congresses and Conferences

Publications

Books

Vinokurov E. (2018) Introduction to the Eurasian Economic Union. Basingstoke and New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
Vinokurov E., Libman A. (2017) Re-Evaluating Regional Organizations: Behind the Smokescreen of Official Mandates. Basingstoke and New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
Vinokurov E., Kulik S., Spartak A., Chernyshev S., Yurgens I. (2015) The Conflict of Two Integrations. Moscow: Ekon-Inform. In Russian.
Vinokurov E. (ed.) (2014) System of Indicators of Eurasian Integration II. St. Petersburg: EDB.
Vinokurov E. (ed.) (2013) EDB Eurasian Integration Yearbook 2013. Almaty: EDB.
Vinokurov E., Libman A. (2012) Eurasian Integration: Challenges of Transcontinental Regionalism. Basingstoke and New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
Libman A., Vinokurov E. (2012) Holding-Together Regionalism: Twenty Years of the Post-Soviet Integration. Basingstoke and New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
Vinokurov E., Libman A. (2012) Еurasian Continental Integration. St. Petersburg: EDB. In Russian.[26]
Vinokurov E. (ed.) (2012) EDB Eurasian Integration Yearbook 2012. Almaty: EDB.
Vinokurov E. (ed.) (2011) EDB Eurasian Integration Yearbook 2011. Almaty: EDB.
Vinokurov E. (ed.) (2010) EDB Eurasian Integration Yearbook 2010. Almaty: EDB.
Vinokurov E. (ed.) (2009) The System of Indicators of Eurasian Integration. Almaty: EDB.
Vinokurov E. (ed.) (2009) EDB Eurasian Integration Yearbook 2009. Almaty: EDB.
Vinokurov E. (ed.) (2008) EDB Eurasian Integration Yearbook 2008. Almaty: EDB.
Gaenzle S., Muentel G., Vinokurov E. (eds.) (2008) Adapting to European Integration? The Case of the Russian Exclave Kaliningrad. Manchester: Manchester University Press.
Vinokurov E. (2007) A Theory of Enclaves. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books.
Vinokurov E. (2007) Kaliningrad: Enclaves and Economic Integration. Brussels: CEPS.[27]
Malfliet K., Verpoest L., Vinokurov E. (eds.) (2007) The CIS, the EU, and Russia: Challenges of Integration. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
Vinokurov E. (2002) Together with Kant. Philosophical Foundations of a Global World Order. Kaliningrad: KGU (in Russian).

Selected Papers and Reports

Vinokurov E. (2019) The Belt and Road Initiative: A Russian Perspective. In: Kohli, H., Linn, J., Zucker L. (eds.) China's Belt and Road Initiative: Potential Transformation of Central Asia and the South Caucasus. SAGE Publications Inc.
Lissovolik Y., Vinokurov E. (2019) Extending BRICS to BRICS+: Potential for Development Finance, Connectivity, and Financial Stability. Area Development and Policy, 4(2): 117-133.
Libman A., Vinokurov E. (2018) Autocracies and Regional Integration: the Eurasian Case. Post-Communist Economies.
Vinokurov E., Tsukarev T. (2018) The Belt and Road Initiative and the Interests of Transit Countries: an Economic Assessment of Transport Corridors. Area Development and Policy, 3: 1: 93-113.
Vinokurov E., Libman A. (2018) Eurasian Integration and its Institutions: Do They Serve to Provide Security in Eurasia? In: Bordachev T., Dutkiewicz P., Lukyanov F., Sakwa R. (eds.) Eurasia on the Edge. Lexington Books, Lanham, MD.
Vinokurov E. (2017) The Eurasian Economic Union: Current State and Preliminary Results. Russian Journal of Economics. Vol. 3 (1): 54-70.
Vinokurov E. (2016) Unter Partnern. Ein nüchterner Blick auf die Eurasische Wirtschaftsunion. Osteuropa, 5: 129-140 (in German)
Vinokurov E. (2016) Eurasian Economic Union: A Sober Look. Voprosy Ekonomiki. No. 12
Vinokurov E., Libman A. (2014) Do Economic Crises Impede or Advance Regional Economic Integration in the Post-Soviet Space?. Post-Communist Economies. Vol. 26 (3): 341–358.
Vinokurov E. (2014) Emerging Eurasian Continental Integration: Trade, Investments, and Infrastructure. Global Journal of Emerging Market Economies. Vol. 6(1): 69-93.
Vinokurov E. (2014) A Mega Deal Amid a Relationship Crisis. Russia in Global Affairs. No. 4.
Libman A., Vinokurov E. (2012) Post-Soviet integration and the interaction of functional bureaucracies. Review of International Political Economy. Vol. 19(5): 867-894
Libman A., Vinokurov E. (2012) Eurasian Economic Union: Why Now? Will It Work? Is It Enough? Whitehead Journal of Diplomacy and International Relations. Summer issue.
Libman A., Vinokurov E. (2012) Regional Integration and Economic Convergence in the Post-Soviet Space: Experience of a Decade of Growth. Journal of Common Market Studies. Vol. 50. Number 1. pp. 112–128.
Libman A., Vinokurov E. (2011) Is it really different? Patterns of regionalisation in the post-Soviet Central Asia. Post-Communist Economies, 23 (4), pp. 469–492.
Vinokurov E., Libman A. (2010) Post-Soviet Regional Integration Trends: Results of Quantitative Analysis, Voprosy Economiki, July.
Vinokurov E., Libman A., Maqsimchook N. (2010) Dynamika integracionnykh processov v Centralnoy Azii [The Dynamics of Integration Processes in Central Asia]. Journal of Eurasian Economic Integration. Vol. 2 (7): 5-32. (In Russian).[28]
Vinokurov E. Libman A. (2009) Systema indikatorov evraziyskoy integracii: osnovnye vyvody [The System of Indicators of Eurasian Integration: Main Findings], Journal of Eurasian Economic Integration, Vol. 4 (5): 38-57. (In Russian).[29]
Vinokurov E., Jadraliyev M., Shcherbanin Y. (2009). The EurAsEC Transport Corridors. EDB Sector Report no.5. April. Almaty: EDB.
Vinokurov E. (2009) Mutual Investment in The CIS Banking Sector, The Euromoney Central Asia & CEE Financial Markets Handbook 2009/10, Euromoney, pp. 4–9.
Vinokurov E. (2008) The CIS Common Electric Power Market. EDB Industry Report no.3. Almaty: EDB.
Vinokurov E. (2008) Nuclear Complexes of Russia and Kazakhstan: Prospects of Development and Cooperation. EDB Industry Report no.1. Almaty: EDB.
Samson I., Lamande V., and Vinokurov E. (2004) Measuring Regional Economic Development in Russia: The Case of the Kaliningrad Oblast, in: European Urban and Regional Studies, (11)1:71-8.
Lamande V., Vinokurov E. (2003) Trade in Kaliningrad Oblast, Problems of Economic Transition, (46)6: 56-72.

References

  1. ^ "The Eurasian Fund for Stabilization and Development". efsd.eabr.org. Retrieved 2019-10-31.
  2. ^ Google Scholar: EDB Centre for Integration Studies
  3. ^ "Reports by the EDB Centre for Integration Studies". eabr.org. Retrieved 2019-10-31.
  4. ^ "Evgeny Y. Vinokurov – Eurasian Fund for Stabilization and Development". efsd.eabr.org. Retrieved 2019-10-31.
  5. ^ "Chief Economist Group – Eurasian Fund for Stabilization and Development". efsd.eabr.org. Retrieved 2019-10-31.
  6. ^ "Author Page for Evgeny Vinokurov :: SSRN". papers.ssrn.com. Retrieved 2019-10-31.
  7. ^ "Evgeny Vinokurov - Google Scholar Citations". scholar.google.com. Retrieved 2019-10-31.
  8. ^ "A Theory of Enclaves" (Lexington Books, Lanham, 2007)
  9. ^ "Kaliningrad: Enclaves and Economic Integration" (CEPS, Brussels, 2007)
  10. ^ "Adapting to European Integration? The Case of the Russian Exclave Kaliningrad" (Manchester University Press, with S. Gaenzle and G. Muentel, 2008)
  11. ^ "A Theory of Enclaves" (Terra Baltica, Kaliningrad, 2007) Available in Russian at http://www.vinokurov.info/enclaves.htm
  12. ^ "The CIS, the EU, and Russia: The Challenges of Integration" (Palgrave Macmillan, London, 2007, with K. Malfliet and L. Verpoest)
  13. ^ International Journal of Economic Policy in Emerging Economies (IJEPEE), from Inderscience Publishers.
  14. ^ "The EDB System of Indicators for the Eurasian Integration" (PDF).
  15. ^ Holding-Together Regionalism: Twenty Years of Post-Soviet Integration. Libman A. and Vinokurov E. (Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke and New York, 2012)
  16. ^ Eurasian Integration: Challenges of Transcontinental Regionalism. Libman A. and Vinokurov E. (Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke and New York, 2012)
  17. ^ Re-Evaluating Regional Organizations: Behind the Smokescreen of Official Mandates. Vinokurov E. and Libman A. (Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke and New York, 2017)
  18. ^ Vinokurov, Evgeny (2018). Introduction to the Eurasian Economic Union. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-3-319-92824-1.
  19. ^ St. Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF)
  20. ^ The Valdai Discussion Club
  21. ^ International Council for Central and East European Studies (ICCEES)
  22. ^ Eurasian Development Bank: Roundtables and Conferences
  23. ^ Astana Economic Forum official website
  24. ^ The Emerging Markets Forum
  25. ^ "World Bank Group - IMF 1997 Annual Meetings". www.imf.org. Retrieved 2019-10-31.
  26. ^ "Еurasian Continental Integration. In Russian".
  27. ^ University of Pittsburgh, Archive of European Integration
  28. ^ "The Dynamics of Integration Processes in Central Asia. In Russian" (PDF).
  29. ^ The System of Indicators of Eurasian Integration: Main Findings. In Russian.