Transcript Objective
How does cohesion policy support rural development
Ex-post evaluation of ERDF support to
rural development: Key findings
(Objective 1 and 2)
2009-10-01
Erich Dallhammer, OIR
Objective and Methodology
Objective:
to assess the nature and importance of the contribution of the
ERDF to the development of rural areas within Cohesion Policy in
the 2000–06 program period
Methodology:
Elaboration of an urban-rural typology of regions
Developing a “conceptual model” depicting how “ERDF programs”
bring about effects in rural areas
Developing a typology of projects
Analysis of 5 selected Member States - (France, Germany, Poland,
Spain, Sweden) – based on Study on Regional Expenditures
Analysis of 5 regional case studies: Centre (FR), Saxony (DE),
Świętokrzyskie (PL), Andalusia (ES) and South Sweden (SE)
Developing policy recommendations for the future contribution of
the ERDF to rural development
Typology
NUTS3
level
based on OECD density criteria
+ population development
Objective 1 ERDF expenditures/head (5 MS)
Expenditures: 28% in rural, 20% in urban, 52% in intermediate regions
Population: 18% in rural, 36% in urban, 46% in intermediate regions
Expenditures / head:
support for especially weak areas with population decline
Objective 2 ERDF expenditures/head (4 MS)
Expenditures: 24% in rural, 35% in urban, 41% in intermediate regions
Population: 18% in rural, 36% in urban, 46% in intermediate regions
Expenditures / head: 2 strategies
Support of strong regions (DE, ES)
Support of weak regions (FR, SE)
Types of projects funded by ERDF Objective 1 2000 - 2006
in DE, ES, FR, PL, SE
0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30%
agriculture, forestry, fisheries
0.1%
investments into business units
20.7%
11.0%
support R&D
education and training
3.6%
services fostering entrepreneurship
0.0%
labour market
0.0%
transport infrastructure
Telecommunication infrastructure
energy infrastructure
projects strengthening regional initiatives
30.9%
1.7%
0.3%
0.3%
environmental measures
11.5%
Land improvement
Source:
Study on regional
Expenditures 2008
social infrastructure
tech. Assistance
35% 40%
16.0%
3.1%
0.7%
High variety of support for project types
Project types with “urban focus”:
critical mass in terms of economic activity required:
- Projects fostering business development
- R&D projects
Project types with “rural focus”:
- transport infrastructure (rural road systems,
strengthening accessibility from “outside”)
- investment in environmental infrastructure (waste, sewerage, …)
Project types with different approaches in the MS:
- social infrastructure (rural focus O2 Spain, O1 France)
- strengthen rural initiatives (rural focus O1 Spain, O2 Germany)
The variety of interventions shows high flexibility of the ERDF:
Within the programming and funding framework, appropriate measures
can be developed to meet the specific needs of regions.
The relevance of the institutional setting
Institutional setting has a high importance for the population's
perception of the amount of support they received from the EU
Different approaches:
“Demand driven approach” :
- without regional /local institutional support structure
-> ERDF focusing on strong (urban) regions:
knowledge + capacity for successful applications available
“Supporting approach”:
- Centre (crafts sector): support for applicants at local level
- Saxony: transport infrastructure in line with
Spatial Development Plan
-> ERDF stronger in weak (rural) regions
location of decision-making on allocation of funds decides
whether it is perceived as near or far from local population
The relation between ERDF – ESF – EAGGF
“division of labour” between the ERDF, ESF, EAGGF
according to programming documents (axes/priorities or measures)
• ERDF: creation of new economic activity in rural areas
•
•
(direct support to enterprises - SME, R&D projects)
+ improvement of Infrastructure (transport, environment, training)
EAGGF: target group of farmers + actors closely linked to it
ESF: person-related measures
(training, qualification, support for employment or services, etc.)
(need for) co-ordination
For project applicants: not always clear which fund for which project
Initiatives to for a better co-operation between funds: e.g.
- France: LAGs implemented the Contrat de Plan Etat Région
- Swedish regional policy: no separate strand focusing on rural areas
Conclusions
The ERDF invested significantly in rural areas in the five
selected Member States
The ERDF supported weak regions independently of their rural,
intermediate or urban character
The ERDF had the flexibility to respond to the different needs of
the regions
The ERDF supported both endogenous and exogenous
development strands
Some intervention types had a strong urban focus, others a
strong rural focus
The delivery mechanisms are important for bringing ERDF
support to the people
1. No “one size fits all” typology to
differentiate between rural and urban area
Rurality can not purely be pictured by a set of indicators cultural concept behind it
whether a territory counts as urban or rural depends strongly on
the national context and the scale
It is very difficult to distinguish ‘‘pure’’ rural areas
- regions range on a scale between ‘‘urbanity’’ and rurality’’
Conclusion:
• The use of urban-rural typologies cannot be recommended for
the evaluation of ERDF effects
• If a comparative assessment of policy effects between the
ERDF and the EAGGF is intended, a breakdown of these
effects in the same territorial context (i.e. rural areas) is needed.
• The Commission should reflect on the necessity of establishing
commonly accepted and useful typologies
2. Stick to the existing approach: support
weak areas, not rural or urban ones
policy should continue to target “weak” areas
regardless of their rural or urban character
definition of “weak”:
go beyond GDP/capita – define few, but effective criteria
(economic performance, quality of life, accessibility)
applied at the same regional scale (e.g. NUTS3) in Europe
Commission:
same definitions and criteria of structural weakness
(economic, social, and environmental) across different funds
Member States:
- use the pre-defined criteria to delimitate areas eligible for
support of Cohesion Policy
- different size according to different territorial patterns and
governance structures - the scale of the regions can differ
from Member State to Member State.
3. Diversify policy delivery mechanisms
according to the character of the measure
Distribution between the funding sources:
mono-funded: “sectoral” projects (e.g. road, rail infrastructure )
co-operation between funds:
when project combines different sectors
Administrative procedures, controlling prerequisites:
the smaller the single support, the more likely trade off between
benefits achieved and administrative burden of obtaining funding
classification of measures to differentiate in terms of
administrative procedures
Number of (potential) project promoters:
the higher the number of beneficiaries – especially located in
rural area - the more decentralized delivery mechanisms
3. Diversify policy delivery mechanisms
according to the character of the measure
Large scale infrastructure (i.e. road, rail and telecoms):
delivered centrally at national level - regional feedback
Various economic sectors involved:
co-ordination of different funding sources
- strategic goals coordinated regionally
- delivery and administration local, close to beneficiaries.
Interventions improving the institutional framework
(i.e. education, local initiatives) + support of business units:
- central (national) coordination of funding programs
- local decision making
The Commission should
- coordinate programs by insisting on cross-sectoral strategic
frameworks in the Member States.
- one strategic framework program in each programming
area, embracing all aspects of territorial development
4. Use a common analytical framework
(including evaluation)
Differentiated delivery mechanisms require adaptation of the
analytical framework for measuring “success” or “failure” of an
ERDF intervention.
Two target groups for measuring success:
Success of policy for the citizens in a region:
- feedback loops at regional level
- evaluations of the extent to which policy has contributed to
quality of life
Success of policy for the European taxpayer:
aggregated result at EU level
- evaluations that provide assessment of the policy as a whole
Thank you!