1 / 22

European Social Fund 2007-2013 Cities facing crisis : how ESF may help ?

European Social Fund 2007-2013 Cities facing crisis : how ESF may help ?. European Commission Interservice Group Brussels, 30 April 2009. Cities at the forefront of the crisis. Cities are experiencing the consequences of the financial and economic crises in many ways :

evarela
Download Presentation

European Social Fund 2007-2013 Cities facing crisis : how ESF may help ?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. European Social Fund 2007-2013Cities facing crisis : how ESF may help ? European CommissionInterservice Group Brussels, 30 April 2009

  2. Cities at the forefront of the crisis • Cities are experiencing the consequences of the financial and economic crises in many ways : • Their financial resources are often limited and budgets under constraint • Their development projects can be put in jeopardy • Their citizens look more to local government for reintegration support and essential social services

  3. Cities at the forefront of the crisis • Cities have a key role in counteracting the crisis : • In the implementation of recovery measures is very often local. • Local and regional governments are responsible for some 70% of public [procurement] expenditure • In providing support and essential social services. • All this action is essential to ensure social stability and prevent social exclusion

  4. How the European Social Fund may help ? • The European Social Fund is the EU’s main financial instrument for supporting jobs and investing in people since 1957 • Supporting employment and combating unemployment is « daily business » for ESF programmes. • In the current crisis situation, its potential scope of action is all the more important.

  5. How the ESF may help ? • Facts and figures about ESF • The European Recovery Plan : • Changes to the Structural Funds Regulation • The priorities in the crisis • Some examples of how cities can use the ESF to enhance their response to the crisis ?

  6. Facts & Figures about ESFBudget Resources share of EU budget (2007-13)

  7. Facts and figures about ESFObjectives & Funds Objectives Funds convergence ERDF ESF Cohesion Fund ERDF ESF regional competitiveness & employment European territorial cooperation ERDF infrastructure, innovation, investments ALMP, training, employment environment, transport, renewable energy all Member States & regions Member States GNI/cap < 90%

  8. Facts and figures about ESFObjectives & Funds ESF = 76 bn€

  9. Convergence (<75% GDP/cap) Regional Competitiveness & Employment 170 mio hab.81% €(68% ESF) 314 mio hab.16% €(32% ESF)

  10. Facts and figures about ESFESF Use per Member State

  11. Facts and figures about ESFThe ESF funding priorities • Adaptability • lifelong learning & work organisation • Access to employment & inclusion in labour market • Human capital • education & training systems & networking activities • Social inclusion • integration in employment & diversity in workplace • Partnerships and pacts • Institutional capacity & efficiency of public administrations & services

  12. The ESF funding priorities

  13. ESF supports … 9 million people trained per year of which …

  14. The European Recovery Plan 26 November 2008 • As part of the European Economic Recovery Plan Commission has also proposed changes to Structural Funds Regulations (General Regulation, ESF and ERDF Regulations) • Objectives: • to strengthen investment with a view to generating renewed growth and job creation • To accelerate and simplify implementation of OPs

  15. Amendments to the General Regulation • Simplify financial engineering • Strengthen the possibility of provision of TA by EIB and EIF (art 46) • Rules to accelerate the implementation of major projects (not applicable to ESF) • More flexible conditions governing the reimbursement of advances in the case of state aids [Art 78 (2) (b)] (relevant also for the ESF) • Clarifications on eligibility of expenditure related to specific provisions of the Funds [Article 56 (2) (b), Article 78(1)] • Additional pre-financing payment (+2,5% for EU12, +2% for EU10) for structural funds (Article 82) (ESF and ERDF)

  16. Amendments to the General Regulation Increased pre-financing to Member States :

  17. Amendments to the ESF Regulation • Introduce the options of lump sums and standard scale of unit costs in addition to flat rate for indirect costs • Lump sums and flat rates particularily relevant for small projects and NGO promoters • How to use the options • Combination (no double financing) • Calculation: in advance on the basis of a fair, equitable and verifiable calculation • Capping of lump sums : € 50,000 • Amendments to be adopted in May 2009

  18. The European Recovery Plan 26 November 2008 In the framework of the European Economic Recovery Plan (EERP), the commission has also called upon the MS to : • reinforce activation schemes, in particular for the low-skilled, involving personalised counselling, intensive (re-)training and up-skilling of workers, apprenticeships, subsidised employment as well as grants for self-employment, business start-up's • refocus programmes to concentrate support on the most vulnerable, and where necessary opt for full Community financing of projects during this period; • improve the monitoring and matching of skills development and upgrading with existing and anticipated job vacancies; The Commission has proposed to the MS to re-programme ESF expenditure to ensure that immediate priorities are met.

  19. How cities can use ESF to enhance their response to the crisis ? • First and above all, it depends on the way cities are involved in the Operational program. It must be remembered that the choice of the appropriate territorial level of management is the responsibility of Members States • Three main cases can be pointed out. • Local authorities are the managing authorities of a specific OP targeting a mainly urban area (“Brussels Capital”, “Prague”, “Berlin”, “Bremen”, “Madrid”…). • Local authorities have been designated by Members States or Managing Authorities as “intermediate bodies”. They manage and implement a part of the operational program. • Local authorities take part to the regular call of proposals organised by the managing authority.

  20. How cities can use ESF toenhance their response to the crisis ? • Many measures co-financed by ESF have been already taken at national or regional level • Reinforcement of activation schemes • Personal guidance and career guidance (UK) • Offering more training and retraining (Greece, Spain) • Promoting self-employment and start ups (Bulgaria, Slovenia, Slovakia, Romania) • Focusing on the most vulnerable • Programme “Employment in the neighbourhoods” (Spain – Catalonia) • Local social capital (Germany – Soziale Stadt) • Matching of skills development and upgrading with existing and anticipated job vacancies • Adaptability of workers and enterprises (Slovenia, Portugal, Wales, Germany) • Anticipation and matching of skills (Poland, England…) • Investing in the institutional capacity building (Greece, Poland)

  21. How cities can use ESF to enhance their response to the crisis ? • And some cities have already reinforced their actions thanks to ESF • in Zaragoza (Es), the crisis has created a very tough situation for the unemployed constructions workers after the 2008 EXPO. A personalised guidance service has been provided. Qualified construction workers receive specialized training to upgrade their skills, whereas non qualified workers (no specific skills and/or short experience) are trained and reoriented towards new careers in sectors with more employment opportunities ; • In England, thirteen London boroughs have joined forces 19 with ESF to deliver more than £ 8 million to projects seeking to help Londoners into paid work (For instance a scheme to help workless parents into employment ; a scheme to provide individuals with mental health, physical or learning disabilities with the skills and support they need to access the job market) • In France, la communauté d’agglomération Mantes en Yveline (CAMY), designated as intermediate body for managing a global grant has launched a call to proposals which intends to develop the offer in training and tools allowing guidance towards current and anciticipated jobs vacancies

  22. More Infohttp://ec.europa.eu/esf

More Related