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Explore competitive regions in Europe and urban drivers influencing economic growth. Learn about disparities in GDP, long-term unemployment, and the impact of small and medium-sized towns. Discover policy-relevant findings for regional competitiveness.
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Competitive regions in Europe Cliff Hague Consultant
Overview • European disparities in competitiveness • Urban drivers • Small and medium-sized towns • Policy-relevant findings
Disparities in competitiveness: Long term unemployment 2003 • Pattern largely reflects national labour markets. • In half of NUTS 2 regions long term unemployed were 40% of the jobless.
Information society • Index built from data on readiness, availability and impacts. • National differences as well as between regions in a country. • North-South, West-East and urban-rural divides.
Patents • Highest share of patent applications is in regions with highest Lisbon orientation. • 24 NUTS 2 regions account for >50%. • Some rural regions are successful.
Headquarters of major European companies • London and Paris are the main nodes. • Randstad is not far behind. • Other significant nodes are Madrid, Stockholm and Helsinki. • Munich is one of the few non-capital cities with several headquarters. • Prague and Budapest have some.
Urban Drivers • The core and the north of Europe lead in many aspects related to competitiveness. • Main urban centres are strong hubs. • Universities, cultural industries, first for telecomm’ updates.
Small and medium-sized towns • Some rural areas “over-perform”. • 72% of Europe’s population lives in settlements of <100,000. • Can offer a high quality of life. • Accessibility matters. • Restructuring and post-productivist countryside.
Policy relevant findings • Strong growth poles inside & outside core. • Territorial governance can be a driver of regional competitiveness. • Culture and natural environment can offer synergies to the jobs and growth agenda. • Nodes in global networks.
Thanks for listening Cliff Hague +44 131 447 5265