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ESPON Seminar, Rome, December 4 th 2014 Workshop 2.B Regional Resilience and Poverty

This workshop will present the findings of the TIPSE project, which aims to map regional patterns of poverty and social exclusion across Europe. Professor Mark Shucksmith from Newcastle University will discuss the research and its implications for policy decisions.

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ESPON Seminar, Rome, December 4 th 2014 Workshop 2.B Regional Resilience and Poverty

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  1. ESPON Seminar, Rome, December 4th 2014 Workshop 2.B Regional Resilience and Poverty Professor Mark Shucksmith, Newcastle University UK. ESPON TiPSE The Territorial Dimension of Poverty and Social Exclusion in Europe

  2. The TIPSE project is the first comprehensive and systematic attempt to map (NUTS3) regional patterns of Poverty and Social Exclusion across Europe to inform policy decisions. The research team comprises 7 partners from 5 EU Member States: Nordregio, Stockholm (Petri Kahila, project coordinator) James Hutton Institute, Aberdeen (Andrew Copus, project leader) Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne Institute of Economics, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest ILS – Research Institute for Regional and Urban Devt, Dortmund EKKE – National Centre for Social Research, Athens UHI Millenium Institute, Inverness Introduction

  3. Source: Eurostat Regio database Table ilc_li41 Year: 2012, except; BE (2011), DE, EL, NL, (2010), FR, UK, (2009) TR, (2006), PT (2005). Region Level: NUTS 0 - EE, CY, LV, LT, LU, MT, IS, HR, TR NUTS 1 - BE, EL, HU, PL, UK NUTS 2 - BG, CZ, DK, DE, IE, ES, FR, IT, NL, AT, PT, RO, SI, SK, NO, CH ARoP – At Risk of Poverty Rate (Eurostat)

  4. ARoP – At Risk of Poverty Rate (TiPSE - NUTS 3) Sources: BE, DE, EL, ES, IT, AT, PT, TR, CH - ESPON TiPSE project. DK, SE, FI, NO, IE, NL, FR, UK, HR - National Statistical Institutes LV, HU, RO, SI, SK - World Bank. BG, CZ, EE, CY, LT, LU, MT, PL, LI - Eurostat Regio Database (NUTS 0-2)

  5. Income poverty rates are; higher in urban areas in 4 countries (the centre) higher in rural/intermediate areas in 11 countries (Med. and East) No clear U-R difference in 5 countries (mostly NW) What can we learn from this map?

  6. Regression across ESPON countries, EU15, EU12, Welfare regime groups, P&SE clusters. Some key results: • Unemployment (total, youth and long-term) is closely associated with ARoP throughout Europe • Profiles of relationships in EU15 and EU12 are slightly different: • EU15 – labour market characteristics, elementary occupations. • EU12 – accessibility, primary sector, education & skills, productivity. • GDP per capita • strong negative correlation in EU12 (i.e regional performance drives poverty rates), BUT • weak relationship in EU15 (intra-regional distributional effects more important than inter-regional variation in overall performance) What socio-economic indicators seem to be associated with income poverty?

  7. 1. 28 different poverty lines…? 2. EU-SILC – sample size issue: • regression modelling is a problematic short term fix • longer term solution is to develop EU-wide register data. Eurostat “Register Hub”? 3. Income is only one aspect of poverty, living costs also very substantially Housing cost adjustment is not enough (urban bias) ARoP – Can we improve on it? National Quintiles Median = 100 National Medians

  8. Social Exclusion is relational, multi-dimensional and dynamic. In TiPSE we identified four broad domains of social exclusion: Earning a living (income; employment) Access to Services (health; education; housing; transport ; communications) Social Environment (Age; Ethnic Composition; Migrants; Crime and Safety) Political participation (Citizenship; Voice) Such a complex multi-faceted concept cannot be mapped by a single indicator. Moreover social exclusion is a set of processes rather than static characteristics. We identified proxy indicators which reflect the risk of different kinds of exclusion. From Poverty to Social Exclusion…?

  9. Mapping SE Domains…

  10. Mapping SE Domains…

  11. EU Social Policy and the ‘Domains’ of SE EU Social Policy emphasises the ‘earning a living’ domain with less attention given to the other domains of ‘access to basic services’, ‘social environment’ and ‘political participation’. All EU policies should contribute to economic, social and territorial cohesion but it is not clear how social strategies seek to address territorial cohesion below the MS level. Social groups at risk of P&SE are targeted but not regions at risk. As a result, many EU policies are ‘territorially blind’. The targeting of regions for allocation of ESIF is according to GDP/head but this is poorly correlated with measures of P&SE Policy Analysis - EU

  12. Welfare Regimes: • Society-based • Individual • State-based • Familial • Transitional Governance Issues: • Lack of data • Subsidiarity • Coordination • Empowerment Policy Analysis – Member States

  13. Policy Implications Recommendation: Use broad conceptualisation of P&SE in all policy arenas and provide appropriate data to support this… We would commend the ’domains’ of P&SE developed in TIPSE as a useful tool in this respect. Conceptualising P&SE P&SE are closely related but nevertheless distinct. The 5 aspects of P&SE are differentially addressed in both data assembled and in policy development: • At risk of poverty rate • Earning a living • Access to services • Social environment • Political participation

  14. Policy Implications Recommendations: P&SE data should be collected and analysed regularly at least at NUTS2 (ideally NUTS3) Elaborate geography of P&SE. Assess value of other methods Consider producing a report on territorial aspects of P&SE Issues of Scale: The territorial risk of P&SE varies according to scale. Different clusters are associated with high incidence of P&SE from different TIPSE domains - as also are different scales. Identification of P&SE in social and political domains, and at sub-national level, is underplayed by social OMC.

  15. Policy Implications Recommendations: Use TIPSE insights to build territorial cohesion dimension into all policies, eg CAP, URBACT. Recognise that geographies of P&SE reflect processes at several scales; and these call for policy at multiple levels Geographies of P&SE: Why do these territorial differences emerge? Rural – urban differences: • Poverty risk worse in rural areas in poorer countries, but not rich. • SE domains differ by R-U. Regions of immigration. • Border regions • Parts of cities Macro-level effects • N-S and E-W splits in EU • Regional splits within countries

  16. Effects of the Crisis: Not a major focus of TIPSE, but… Most Mediterranean states, Baltic states, Ireland and some East Central European countries were worst hit. Widespread austerity measures of MSs led to cuts in state services which reinforced P&SE, especially in remoter areas. Intra-Europe migration patterns changed because of the Crisis In some regions the outmigration of young people has made the challenge of an ageing population more acute. The capacity of family-based support structures in southern Europe appears further stretched by the Crisis Policy Implications

  17. Policy Implications Monitoring recommendations: Broaden set of data expressing multidimensionality of SE Data accessible at as low NUTS level as possible Encourage mutual learning among monitoring bodies, through secondments and exchange of experiences Making existing data (indicators) accessible in a more user-friendly manner. Recommendations: National Reform Programmes should include Regional Chapters CLLD/LEADER type approach should be encouraged as a means of alleviating P&SE at local level. In resource & policy targeting, high risk of P&SE should be considered as well as GDP/head. Differential living costs should also be reflected in indicators. Common issues could usefully be discussed among similar regions Consider how best to collate and disseminate case studies

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