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Workshop 2.3: ESPON TeDiThe use of comparative advantages
in regional strategy building.
Open SeminarESPON Evidence for
Regional Policy-MakingContributing to the Europe 2020 Strategy
9-10 June 2010Alcalá de Henares, Spain
Erik Gløersen
The ESPON TeDi project team
- Island Consulting Services, Malta- University of Akureyri, Iceland
Erik Gløersen
Demographic trends
Erik Gløersen
Age structure
Pronounced ageing in many localities,
but also significant over-representations of young people
High age dependency ratios are a shared feature of most areas
Erik Gløersen
Economic activities
Main deviations from average profile of case study areas
Diversity of situations
Erik Gløersen
Economic activities
Relative importance of
-Agriculture
-Services
-Manufacturing
Erik Gløersen
Economic activities
Deviations from averageprofile in terms of employment per economic branch.
Erik Gløersen
Ensuring a sustainable development based on regional comparative advantages
- The assets are generally well identified
- However, the analysis of key obstacles to their exploitation is generally insufficent, e.g:- Demographic decline- Lack of appropriate competencies- Insufficiently developed infrastructure
- Conceptualisation of development opportunitiesas a combination of factorsthat need to be brought into coherence
Capacity of an approachbased on regions with geographic specificities to contribute to this.
Erik Gløersen
Ensuring a sustainable development based on regional comparative advantages
- Identification of situations where the market fails to take proper advantage of an identified resource.
- Insufficient regional returns on the exploitation of natural resources Acknowledging the existence of conflicting interests at
different territorial scales
- Multiplicity of development models that needs to be recognised Challenging the monolitical character of the Lisbon agenda
Erik Gløersen
Improving the foundation of development
• Overcoming the duality in local development strategies,– Seeking to assert their uniqueness– While also aspiring to mainstream development objectives-
• Question of the institutional capacity to formulate strategies: The case study regions have developed variable solutions to design a development strategy based on their unique characteristics;
• The relative isolation of many TeDi areas limits the capacity to see opportunities and think out of the box.
• The value of wide ranging, incremental approaches of innovation could be further recognised;
• Self-perception and identity need to be further highlighted as central factors of local development.
Erik Gløersen
Achieving a continuous long-term improvement of quality of life
• A number of recurring issues in the TeDi areas:– Income– Gender balance– Focus on youth as a basis for economic development– Branding, self-perception– Symbolic role of knowledge-intensive activities– Minimal requirements in terms of services– Diversity of lifestyles as a European value
• The main issues are however related to small and (relative) isolation of settlements
• A more in depth undetstanding of the importance of promoting alternative lifestyles as an instrument of territorical cohesion.
Erik Gløersen
Inputs to European policy debates
Conceptual clarifications needed:
(1) Level of performance ≠ Structural obstacles to growth
More than average scores ≠ good scores Geographically specific area ≠ Lagging area
(2) Economic importance ≠ Economic weight
(3) Balanced, harmonious and sustainable development requires more than economic growth
geographic specificities may help identifying contradictions and mutually beneficial effects of different types of policies
Erik Gløersen
Inputs to European policy debates
Dealing with geographic specificities is often about creating new types of connections between areas
- Within regions- Across regional and national boundaries
Compensating for imbalances in flows Creating alliances through which actors can strengthen
the robustness and resilience of their local communities Gaining greater weight in economic and political
systems dominated by main urban areas
At the European scale, a change of focus of territorial policies, incorporating the sub-regional scale is required to encourage and accompany these processes.
The focus should be on potentials rather than on relative performance
Erik Gløersen
Economic development strategiesfor ”Territorial Diversity”
The second main policy perspective concerns the defense of a European model of society.
Is a maintained human presence justified everywhere?
If one does acknowledge that some presence and certain types of resource exploitation are needed,the question are
- what social form this should take,- what public interventions are required for this
purpose.