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Open seminar, Alcalá de Hanares, Spain, 9-10 June, 2010

This presentation will cover the concept of agglomeration and its impact on metropolitan/city-regional governance. It will also discuss the three key questions of the CAEE project and provide observations on ESPON's 'targeted analysis' model.

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Open seminar, Alcalá de Hanares, Spain, 9-10 June, 2010

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  1. Open seminar, Alcalá de Hanares, Spain, 9-10 June, 2010 The CAEE targeted analysis project: the ‘new’ agglomeration and metropolitan/ city-regional governance Alan Harding, University of Manchester

  2. This presentation • Preliminaries: agglomeration and metropolitan/city-regional governance • 2. Headline answers to the three key questions • 3. Dissemination arrangements • 4. Observations on ESPON’s ‘targeted analysis’ model

  3. Preliminaries • Agglomeration: the ‘new’ buzz word • Literally; ‘gathering together in a mass’ • Old urban (economic) geography concept with 2 competing traditions • ‘Localisation economies’, benefits experienced by firms from co-location (Marshall. Modern version; Porter on ‘clusters’) • ‘Urbanisation economies’, benefits derived by workers and households as well as firms from city size, density and variety (Jacobs. Modern version; Florida’s ‘creative class’) • Associated with key observations e.g. productivity benefits of population and employment density, urban wage premium • Recent rediscovery by economists who had previously ignored ‘increasing returns to (urban) scale’ • Basis of new work on, e.g. ‘spillover effects’, ‘effective density’, why falling transport costs are associated with concentration rather than dispersal of economic activity etc. • BUT concerned with ‘what’, not ‘why’

  4. Preliminaries (cont.) • Agglomeration, productivity and (urban) scale in a knowledge driven economy • City-regions are locomotives of the national economies within which they are situated, in that they are the sites of dense masses of interrelated economic activities that also typically have high levels of productivity by reason of their jointly-generated agglomeration economies and their innovative potentials • Scott and Storper, 2003 • Metropolitan spaces are becoming, more and more, the adequate ecosystems of advanced technology and economy…. [T]he decrease of communication costs does not by itself lead to a spreading and diffusion of wealth and power; on the contrary, it entails their polarization. • Veltz, 2005

  5. Preliminaries (cont.) • Metropolitan/city-regional productivity and governance • Work of Cheshire and Magrini (2008) demonstrates statistical association between economic performance and existence of metropolitan/city-regional tier /unit of governance • But treats governance as a ‘black box’ • Little appreciation of what metropolitan/city-regional governance arrangements actually do and how they relate to other scales of governance/market-based decision-making • Hence the CAEE project and its key questions

  6. Key question 1 • Have agglomeration economies become more important across Europe? • Yes. Demonstrated in three main ways • Econometric analysis • Relationship between employment density and economic growth strengthened over time, especially over last decade • Evidence that urbanisation economies increased, and localisation economies declined, in importance with shift to ‘knowledge economy’ • GVA mapping at European and national levels • Strong correlation between employment density and GVA growth • Stretching of urban hierarchy (national and international) • Case study sectoral employment change analysis • Reconcentration of high value economic activity into core metropolitan areas + selective decentralisation of medium value sector activity • Grouping of modern manufacturing around critical infrastructures; peripheral low value manufacturing areas a key challenge

  7. Key question 2 • Should public policy focus on understanding, influencing and managing agglomeration economies more effectively? • Yes, if only to eliminate wasteful competition and limit unsustainable development, but needs to recognise... • Agglomeration patterns are driven by countless individual firm/household decisions, not grand policy designs • Key public sector ‘steering devices’ are indirect ‘big ticket’ issues: critical infrastructure, high level skills/education, corporate taxation, mega-developments • National government role (or regional govt.s in strongly decentalised systems) therefore crucial • Evidence of consistency in national approach to spatial development and clear linkage to expenditure planning setting important context • Devolution/decentralisation can represent problem avoidance as well as empowerment

  8. Key question 3 • What ‘good practice’ was observed within the CAEE case study areas (Barcelona, Dublin, Lyon, Manchester) • Critical issues: realistic expectations, decision-making and delivery capacity, leadership and influence • Metropolitan/city-regional governance arrangements vary widely in their scope, focus and autonomy. An ‘ideal’ model has.. • Supportive national context • Strong technical capacity (analytical and delivery) • Significant influence at regional/national scales • Strong horizonal networks with key, independent public and private institutions • A compelling and broadly-shared ‘narrative’ • Strong leadership and co-ordinating capacity • Ability to recognise and deal with the environmental and social implications of realising its strategic ambitions

  9. Dissemination arrangements • Three routes for dissemination of findings • Internal (ESPON) • Reports, working papers • Steering Group meetings • Open seminar presentations • External - policy • Presentations at professional/policy events • Working paper for Manchester Commission for the New Economy (+ launch event) • At least one post-project presentation in Barcelona • External - academic • Journal submissions based on aspects of work (econometric analysis, case studies, final report)

  10. The ‘targeted analysis’ model • Two and a half cheers for ESPON! • Targeted analyses can be effective at bringing academic analysis and institutional/policy concerns together • But improvements would require.... • More investment in ‘speaking the same language’ • More sustained research-policy engagement , not just one-off meetings, comments on written products • Earlier engagement of researchers in defining key questions, not simply responding to pre-defined brief • Output/results-based rather than input-/process-based project management model

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