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Connecting
Cohesion Policy
With Rural
Development?
EU Workshop On Cohesion Policy
and Rural Development
Brussels, Sep. 30, 2009
David Freshwater, OECD Rural
Development Programme
OECD Position
• OECD broadly endorses economic flexibility
and economic growth through:
• Strong competition
• More open markets
• Technological innovation
• Rural Development policy follows the New
Rural Paradigm
•
•
•
•
Investment based approach
All regions have growth potential
Bottom-up process
Variety of sectors
Cohesion Policy
• Fundamentally cohesion policy is about
strengthening the bonds among the people
in a community.
– But what do we mean by community?, and
– What types of bonds are we interested in
strengthening?
Two Meanings of Community
• Community of Place
•
•
•
•
Whole world – global village
European Union
Nation
Region
– Administrative
– Functional
• Locality
• Community of Interest
Types of Bonding
• Economic Linkages
• Trade flows
• Access to technology
• Capital Markets
• Shared Social Values
•
•
•
•
Willingness to help disadvantaged
Desire to protect environment
Belief in democratic political system
Trust in members of the community
EU Cohesion Policy
• Historically defined in terms of the EU as the
community and with a strong emphasis on
improving the economic well-being of people
in those sub-national administrative regions
which are furthest from the EU average in
terms of GDP per person.
• Cohesion Policy can be seen as a response to
the adverse distributional consequences of
enlargement and the shift to a more
globalized economy that is driven by finance
and technological change
Two Interpretations of EU
Cohesion Policy
• Redistributive
• Grew out of the European Social Model where
government taxes the “winners” to compensate the
“losers”.
• Part of the bargain in each round of enlargement to
“buy-off” opposition.
• Encourages rent-seeking behavior.
• Efficiency Enhancing
• Response to market failures that provides lagging
regions with resources to enhance growth, thereby
adding to aggregate output.
What Distinguishes Rural
Places
• Low density, prevalence of distance, and lack of
critical mass.
• The most crucial problem in rural areas is low
density networks. Markets work best in dense
networks (high connectivity, multiple pathways,
low connection costs).
• As a result of low connectivity, community in rural
areas is almost exclusively community of place.
• Distance makes it more difficult to get to critical
mass – as you add more people the average
distance among people goes up.
What We Know About
Successful Rural Localities
• Bottom-up process is key – people have to build
local trust and local social capital.
• There are capital gaps, but more commonly there
are idea gaps and entrepreneurship gaps.
• Not all rural places will be successful, but some
rural regions can grow faster than most urban
regions.
• Average income in rural areas is rarely as high as
in urban areas because the occupational
composition does not include as many high skill
jobs.
Can Coherence Policy Make a
Difference in Rural Regions?
• Coherence policy is mainly about bonding to
the EU, but for rural development we need
bonding at the locality or functional region.
• Coherence policy seems focused on per capita
GDP and convergence, but many rural areas
are specialized in lower value, but necessary,
functions.
• Social cohesion may be a prerequisite for
stronger economic cooperation.
• Coherence policy is an inherently top down
process, but rural development is bottom-up.