1 / 16

2009 Japan Day Seminar The role of local government in recession: strategies and solutions

2009 Japan Day Seminar The role of local government in recession: strategies and solutions Sarah Longlands, Director of Policy Centre for Local Economic Strategies (CLES). Centre for Local Economic Strategies. Focus – influencing economic development and regeneration policy

birch
Download Presentation

2009 Japan Day Seminar The role of local government in recession: strategies and solutions

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. 2009 Japan Day Seminar The role of local government in recession: strategies and solutions Sarah Longlands, Director of Policy Centre for Local Economic Strategies (CLES)

  2. Centre for Local Economic Strategies • Focus – influencing economic development and regeneration policy • Membership – local authorities, private, social enterprise • Publications – informing policy and effective practice • Training and events to support the sector • Independent research to understand challenges and influence policy and practice • Consultancy trading arm – to fund the • activities of the CLES trust

  3. The challenges for local government • The speed of investment and disinvestment in localities • Growing level of population and spatial developments • Demographic change and greater movement of people • ongoing environmental resource constraints • Growing concern about demands of economic growth versus quality of life and social equity

  4. The challenges for local government • In this context it is even more important that the local economies of places are managed and stewarded effectively • Perhaps we need less focus on economic growth as end its self and greater recognition of the need not only for growth but for resilience in our economies • Resilience: change ready and adaptable, riding global economic punches, recovering quickly, working within environmental benefits and having high levels of social inclusion • But what factors contribute towards economic resilience so that the economy, the community and the environment remains strong?

  5. Resilience

  6. Norfolk Trust Fellowship Research project

  7. PORTLAND

  8. Planning laws which restrict urban growth An extensive and vibrant network of civic engagement A “local” feel, with some antagonism towards big business? BROAD ECONOMIC CONTEXT LOCAL ECONOMIC TERRITORY COMMERCIAL WORKING WITHIN ENVIRONMENTAL LIMITS GOVERNMENT PUBLIC SOCIAL LOCAL IDENTITY AND CONTEXT HISTORY AND CULTURE PORTLAND

  9. YOKKAICHI

  10. Public sector drive behind regeneration A strong focus on innovation Little in the way of a formal social sector, but a collective culture BROAD ECONOMIC CONTEXT LOCAL ECONOMIC TERRITORY WORKING WITHIN ENVIRONMENTAL LIMITS COMMERCIAL GOVERNMENT PUBLIC SOCIAL LOCAL IDENTITY AND CONTEXT HISTORY AND CULTURE YOKKAICHI

  11. 4 key lessons for local authorities • Local government taking a broad view of the ‘economy’ • social, public and commercial are all important for resilience and have a role to play • a broad palette of approaches works • each blend of components will be unique by place • Portland and Yokkaichi stand out in this regard • Too much orthodoxy in local economic practice?

  12. key lessons for local authorities • 2. Local government getting to grips with ‘pulse of place’ • Identity and a focus on place matters. • Too much homogeneity of practice • Too many similar strategies and approaches • Relationship to place is key • Investment needs to be attracted to place to create some inertia so it does not relocate when factors of production change • Physical location - Gdansk • Cultural identity – Portland

  13. key lessons for local authorities • 3. Local government knowing when to intervene and when to get out of the way • Extremes of doing very little or overly intervening are both bad policy • Getting out of the way can create growth quickly.. But this strategy may not be resilient in the long term? • Economic growth is a means to an end NOT an end in itself • Intervene to disperse benefits of growth - Portland

  14. key lessons for local authorities • 4. Local government as a ‘coagulant’ • Local government acting as the glue or the fixer • A coagulant isi not necessarily about acting and intervening a lot…but perhaps more subtle • All areas had it but some more than others • Decentralisation/devolution is key • Giving away power is power

  15. Taking this research forward: Economic resilience in the UK? • Exploring the application of the resilience model in local authorities across the UK • Rural districts, core cities, networks of settlements • Types of strategies that local authorities are developing to engender resilience in their local communities • Can we develop new ideas/new approaches to achieving both economic prosperity along with strong communities and social justice

  16. For more information: Sarahlonglands@cles.org.uk www.cles.org.uk 0161 236 2036

More Related