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THE EUROPEAN UNION: ECONOMY, SOCIETY, AND POLITY. by Andr és Rodríguez-Pose London School of Economics Oxford University Press ISBN 0-19-874286-X. Part III. POLICY. Chapter 7 . Regionalism and regionalization. Introduction.
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THE EUROPEAN UNION: ECONOMY, SOCIETY, AND POLITY by Andrés Rodríguez-Pose London School of Economics Oxford University Press ISBN 0-19-874286-X
Part III POLICY
Chapter 7 Regionalism and regionalization
Introduction • An important challenge to the European nation-state is emerging from below • Recently most European countries have witnessed a revival of regionalism • This revival has triggered processes of regionalization and devolution • Centralized states are increasingly becoming the exception to the rule(a ‘Europe of the Regions’) • Main questions: • How and why did the process of regionalization come about? • Are we really witnessing the emergence of a ‘Europe of the Regions’?
Regional devolution in Europe • At the end of the 1960s • The great majority of the states in Europe were centralized states • Powerful central administrations • Solid and generally small local authorities • Regions as mere administrative divisions • Austria, Germany, and Switzerland (with Yugoslavia on the other side of the Iron Curtain) as the main exceptions to the rule • At the beginning of the 21st century • Strong central governments are on the retreat • Centralized governments are increasingly confined to relatively small and homogenous states
Regional devolution in Europe (II) • Challenges to the centralized state have been widespread in larger and less homogenous states • Partition of former plurinational states: Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, Soviet Union • Devolution as a general process in the EU • Federal states: power of the central state confined to foreign policy, defence and some macro-economic management (A, B, D) • Regional states: Substantial autonomy achieved without a profound restructuring of the state (E, I) • ‘Regionalized states’: less advanced form of decentralization (F, P, UK) • Unitary states: little or no decentralization (Dk, SF, Gr, Irl, L, Nl, S)
Regional devolution in Europe (III) • There are also differences in the levels of regional autonomy within states • Homogenous level of devolution only in federal states and France • ‘Asymmetrical devolution’ in Italy, Portugal, Spain, and the UK • ‘Historical’ regions or regions with greater ‘identity’ enjoy higher levels of autonomy (Italy and Spain) • Parts of the country have devolved powers, while others remain under central rule (Portugal and the UK)
From regionalism to regionalization • Two waves of regionalism and regionalization (Keating 1998) • 1960s and 1970s: Deeply rooted in identity issues • Late 1980s and 1990s: the ‘new regionalism’ • More widespread than in the previous wave • More often based on economic rather than on identity grounds • Austria and Germany • Federal states since the second WW • Federal structure as a way to weaken the power of the central state and to prevent the re-emergence of German militarism
From regionalism to regionalization (II) • Belgium • The country that has undergone the deepest transformation: From unitary to regionalized in 1970 and to federal in 1993 • Regional division based on the deep linguistic and cultural cleavages that divide the state • Regional division of power follows two criteria: • Language: Three communities (Flemish-speaking, French-speaking and German-speaking communities) • Identity: Three regions (Flanders, Wallonia, and Brussels) • The Flemish Community and Region have merged into one entity • Result: a complex territorial structure with five territorially overlapping subnational entities
From regionalism to regionalization (III) • Spain • A failed secular nation-building process and repression of regional identities by the Francoist regime fuelled resentment in the peripheral nations of Spain • With the restoration of democracy came a process of regional autonomy • Asymmetrical devolution process across regions: • Highest autonomy in the regions keeping their medieval privileges (fueros): The Basque Country and Navarre • High autonomy in regions with strong identity: Catalonia, Galicia, Andalusia, Valencia, Canary Is. • Much lower level of autonomy in the remaining regions (although the gap has narrowed in recent years)
From regionalism to regionalization (IV) • Italy • Origins of the regionalization process can be traced back to imperfect nation-building • Important cleavages remain • The Questione Meridionale (question of the South), relative underdevelopment of the South of the country • Existence of linguistic minorities in peripheral regions • 1948 Constitution has provided for ‘asymmetrical devolution’ • 5 ‘special status’ regions, with a high level of autonomy (Sicily, Sardinia, Valle d’Aosta, Trentino, Friuli) • 15 ‘ordinary status’ regions, with a much lower level of autonomy • Ongoing process of federalization
From regionalism to regionalization (V) • UK • Regionalism has basically affected the peripheral nations of the country • The ‘union state’, created in 1707, has not succeeded in creating a British national identity • The first wave of regionalism of the 1960s and 1970s ended with the rejection of devolution in referenda • A second wave has taken place since the arrival of New Labour in 1997 • Devolution was approved in referenda for Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland, and London • However, ‘asymmetrical level’ of devolution, with a huge gap between the powers of the Scottish, at one end, and the London executives, at the other
From regionalism to regionalization (VI) • France • Weak decentralization in France more the result of planning than of the strength of regionalist movements • Direct election of Regional Councils from 1986 onwards has granted French regions greater legitimacy • But level of autonomy well below that of neighbouring countries • New regionalist wave in the late 1990s and beginning of the 21st century • Devolution for Corsica on the political agenda
The bastions of centralism • Seven of the fifteen Member States of the EU are still centralized countries • These tend to be small and relatively homogenous countries • Devolution debate active in some of these countries • The Netherlands, where regionalization has always remained in the background • Portugal, whose population rejected plans devolve powers to the Portuguese mainland regions in 1998
The transfer of power from the nation state to the regions • Regionalization has brought about important changes in governance and policy making structures across the EU • Increase of transfers of powers from the centre to regional governments • Even the regions with the lowest level of autonomy (i.e. regions in France) are responsible for a considerable array of policies • The expansion of regional powers has not always been matched by a similar increase in regional resources • With the exception of Spain, the expenditure balance between central and regional and local governments has remained relatively stable
Share of total government expenditure by different tiers of government (1980-97)
The transfer of power from the nation state to the regions (II) • Recent steps are, however, going in the direction of granting greater resources to regional governments • The tax varying powers accorded to the Parliament award the Scottish executive a significant capacity to raise revenue • During the 1990s Spanish regions have been granted access to 30 per cent of the income tax revenues generated within their territory • Fiscal federalism is advancing in Italy with the introduction of new forms of regional taxation
The roots of the regionalization process • What are the factors behind the drive towards devolution in Europe? • The revival of nationalism and regionalism across Europe since the 1960s • The sources behind this regeneration where of historic, linguistic, and cultural nature • Regions with a strong identity led the way (Catalonia, Basque Country, Scotland, Flanders, Brittany, Sicily) • Demands for autonomy were centred around the need to protect and promote regional culture, languages, and identity • The use of economic arguments in the 1990s • Globalization is undermining the capacity of nation states to control economic development processes within their territories • The region is becoming a key actor in a global setting
The roots of the regionalization process (II) • Globalization also poses challenges to regions • The greater mobility of factors of production is forcing regions to adopt more pro-active development strategies • Regions and cities are forced to compete with one another for mobile assets • Regional success increasingly depends on the capacity of each region to adopt pro-active policies and to form a complex web of public and private institutions • Devolution is regarded as a way of guaranteeing economic survival in an increasingly competitive world
Towards a ‘Europe of the regions’? • It is claimed that transfers of powers to supranational and subnational bodies is contributing to the ‘hollowing out’ of the nation state • Taken to its limits, this implies that the nation state in the European context no longer matters (O’Brien, 19992; Ohmae, 1995) • Emergence of a ‘Europe of the regions’ • But is a ‘Europe of the regions’ really emerging? • For some (Milward, 1999) European integration has not only not weakened, but is reinforcing the power of the nation state
Towards a ‘Europe of the regions’? (II) • The transformation of the nation state • Capacity to shape matters that go beyond their national boundaries • States as power brokers between subnational and supranational levels of government (Hirst and Thompson, 1995) • Regional economic performance still very much embedded in national economic performance • We seem to be closer to a ‘Europe with the regions’ than to a ‘Europe of the regions’
Conclusion • The revival of regionalism has triggered a profound transformation of the territorial organization of European states • Devolution processes have both advantages and disadvantages • Advantages: • Greater diversity of policies and possibly greater transparency and adjustment to local and regional needs • Disadvantages: • Greater competition among regions • Possibly a lower capacity of poorer regions to compete in a globalized world