Prof. Dr. Zoltán Cséfalvay is head of the Centre for Next Technological Futures at Mathias Corvinus Collegium, Budapest, where he gives lectures and conducts research on the economic, social and geopolitical impacts of digitalisation, robotisation and artificial intelligence in Europe. Previously, he worked as senior researcher at the Joint Research Centre of European Commission in Seville (2019-2020), he served as ambassador of Hungary to the OECD and UNESCO in Paris (2014-2018) and as Minister of State for Economic Strategy in Hungary (2010-2014).He was a professor of economic geography at Andrássy University Budapest (2002-2010) and has been a professor at Kodolányi János University in Hungary for more than two decades. As a research fellow he worked in Budapest, Vienna, Munich, Heidelberg, and Cardiff. Recently he has published his latest book - TECHtonic Shifts - on the current industrial revolution.
Zoltán Cséfalvay, PhD
Head of of Center for Next Technological Futures
E-mail: Show Email
Scientific (PhD) degrees
Kossuth Lajos University - 1999 - Habilitation in Geography
Hungarian Academy of Sciences - 1995 - PhD in Geography
Kossuth Lajos University - 1986 - Dr. Univ. in Geography
Degrees in higher education
Kossuth lajos University - History & Geography - 1982
Further accredited trainings/courses
Ludwig-Maximilan-University, Munich - DAAD Fellowship - 1987-1988
Teaching experience
Kodolányi János University, Székesfehérvár - professor - 1996 -
Andrássy Gyula Deutschsprachige Universitaet - professor - 2002-2008
Cardiff University - research fellow - 2008 - 2010
Previous affiliations
Joint Research Centre, European Commission - senior researcher - 2019 - 2020
Hungary's Embassy to the OECD - ambassador - 2014 - 2018
minister of state for economic strategy - 2010 - 2014
Cardiff University - research fellow - 2008 - 2010
Andrássy Gyula Deutschsprachige Universitaet - professor - 2002 - 2008
Research projects
The Rise of the Scaleup Cities in Europe - Mathias Corvinus Collegium - Head of CentreforNext Technological Futures - 2021 -
Territorial dimensions of digitalisation and their policy challenges for Europe - Joint Research Centre, European Commission, Seville - senior researcher - 2019 - 2020
The Challenge of Private Urban Governance and the Rise of Gated Communities in Europe - Cardiff University - research fellow - 2008-2010
New Segregation – Gated Communities in Hungary - Kodolányi János University - research professor - 2002 -2006
Competitiveness of the large urban centres in Austria - Austrian Academy of Sciences - research fellow - 1997 - 1999
Scholarships/grants
Heidelberg University - Alexander von Humboldt grant - 1995 - 1997
Ludwig-Maximilian-University, Munich - DAAD felloship - 1987 - 1988
Awards
Republic of Poland - Chevalier dans l’Ordre du Mérité - 2015
Corvinus University - Kaldor Prize - 2004
Spoken languages
English - C2
German - C2
French - A2
Spanish - B1
Research topics
The Rise of Scaleup Cities in Europe
Territorial dimensions of digitalisation and their policy challenges for Europe
The Challenge of Private Urban Governance and the Rise of Gated Communities in Europe
From Prediction Machines to Superintelligence – How Artificial Intelligence is transforming Business?
Innovation Economics
Nudging: Theory and Practice
Reading Seminar: Four books about the Fourth Industrial Revolution
Understanding the Fourth Industrial Revolution: Society & Geopolitics
Understanding the Fourth Industrial Revolution: Technology & Economy
Featured publications
Robotization in Central and Eastern Europe: catching up or dependence?
Cséfalvay Zoltán (2020).
European Planning Studies 28.8 (2020): 1534-1553.
While in the most developed European countries the combination of falling robot prices and high wages boosts robotization, these driving factors do not sufficiently explain why we are experiencing today a sharp increase in deployment of industrial robots in European countries with low wages. Particularly, in Central and Eastern Europe where a decade ago industrial robots were almost non-existent but today more than 30,000 robots are at work. Hence this paper, by recalculating the data of International Federation of Robotics and EU-KLEMS addresses the main question: What drives and hinders the robotization in Central and Eastern Europe?
Robotisation race in Europe: the robotisation chain approach
Zoltán Cséfalvay, Petros Gkotsis (2022),
Economics of Innovation and New Technology, 31(8), 693-710.
Who leads the robotisation race in Europe? For the answer, this paper develops a novel analytical framework, primarily by applying the concept of the global value chain to robotisation. By doing this, we investigate in detail the entire robotisation chain, from robotics developers over robot manufacturers to companies that deploy the industrial robots. For the R&D-intensive part of the chain (robotics development), we analyse robotics patent data from PATSTAT combined with firm data from ORBIS while for the capital-intensive part (deployment of robots) the source of information is the International Federation of Robotics. Our results show that the European robotisation landscape is fragmented into three groups. The first includes economies (Sweden, Germany, Austria, Denmark and France) that have the highest densities both in robotics development and in robot deployment. Countries of the second group (Spain, Italy, Belgium, the Netherlands and Finland) possess good positions only in some specific parts of the chain, while the lagging behind region (the majority of Central and Eastern Europe) is integrated into the robotisation chain solely by robot deployment. Hence, one of the main related policy challenges is to find ways for upgrading along the robotisation chain.
Gated communities for security or prestige? a public choice approach and the case of Budapest
Cséfalvay Zoltán (2011),
International journal of urban and regional research 35, no. 4 (2011): 735-752.
While in the mainstream narrative gated communities are regarded as incidental or deviate developments, this article attempts to offer, on the basis of public choice theory, an alternative answer to the fundamental question: why are people moving to gated residential areas? Drawing on the case of Budapest, it discusses the dominant theses and concludes that eagerness for prestige seems to surpass both fear of crime and the urge for self-segregation on the part of the affluent as the dominant motive. The search for prestige is particularly intense in Budapest, where local governments possess very weak fiscal autonomy and depend strongly on state grants, making them hardly able to provide the public goods and services that meet citizens' preferences. Consequently, in Budapest and to some extent rather ironically, the rise of gated communities, which in the literature is vehemently disputed as a socially problematic process, has become a manifestation of the revolt of the upper middle class against a grossly overcentralized government
TechTonic Shifts,
Cséfalvay Zoltán (2017),
Kairosz Kiadó
I originally intended this book to be a diary about my days at the OECD. However, as the entries mounted up I soon realised that we are experiencing a great transition. When does a new era start? Once our old notions do not work anymore, or if using them becomes so forced that we begin losing touch with reality. We continue to employ the concepts of the epoch of globalisation such as international trade, labour productivity or the SME sector, although they apply less and less to the world of robots, giant digital corporations, new global value chains, user networks hundreds of millions strong and dynamic start-ups. Perhaps we can better understand the transformation around us if we adopt a different perspective and start out from what we see, ie the features of a new age.
Gates or no gates? A cross-European enquiry into the driving forces behind gated communities
Zoltán Cséfalvay, Chris Webster (2012),
Regional Studies 46, no. 3 (2012): 293-308.
This paper addresses one of the biggest gaps in research on gated communities: why is the phenomenon so strong in some countries, but absent in others? After reviewing the mainstream explanations, it outlines an alternative thesis based on theories of public choice and fiscal federalism. To test the relevance of the theory, European countries are divided into two groups – those with a considerable number of gated communities and those with very few or none – and they are compared on fifteen indicators. The results indicate that beyond the visible manifestation of gates and walls, there are deeper institutional driving forces.
Featured research
Featured corvinas
Csaba Johanyák
műhelytag, https://cntf.mcc.hu/person/csaba-johanyak
What role do accelerators play in the growth of startups? Local versus global venture capital: where do scaleups get their funding from?
Viktor Lázár
student researcher, https://cntf.mcc.hu/person/viktor-lazar
Make an impact or chase profits? Characteristics of ESG and profit-oriented incubators and accelerators
Máté Ujvárosi
student researcher, https://cntf.mcc.hu/person/mate-ujvarosi
The impact of large companies investing in R&D on European startup cities
Dávid Ilonczai
student researcher, https://cntf.mcc.hu/person/david-ilonczai
The impact of Covid-19 on the CEE startup ecosystem. What are the main factors that build up the basics of a resilient environment?
Barbara Darcsi
student
The role of universities in creating a successful startup ecosystem
Veronika Péter
student
The role of universities in creating a successful startup ecosystem