Investing inregions and cities: EU Cohesion Policy Cohesion policy

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Investing inregions and cities: EU Cohesion Policy 2014-2020 Cohesion policy

The European Union is diverse GDP/capita 2

The European Union is diverse Unemployment 3

The European Union is diverse Third-level education 4

Why an EU Cohesion Policy? Top MS Bottom MS Ratio GDP per person (% average EU-28) Luxemburg 266% Bulgaria 47% 5.7 Employmentrate (%, ages20-64) Sweden 80.5% Greece 54.9% 1.5 Eurostat figures for the years 2014 (GDP/head) and 2015 (employment rate) 5

Why an EU Cohesion Policy? Top 10% regions* Bottom10% regions* Ratio GDP per person (% average EU-28) 2014 180.3% 47.5% 3.8 Employmentrate (%, ages20-64) 2015 81.1% 51.0% 1.6 * Top / bottom 10% of EU population. In the United States, the difference is only 1.8 and in Japan 2.5 (GDP per person) EU figures: Eurostat; US and Japan figures : OECD. 6

Cohesion Policy finds its origins in the Treaty of Rome Preamble to the Treaty of Rome (1957): necessity to strengthen the unity of their economies and to ensure their harmoniousdevelopment by reducing the differences existing betweenthe various regions and the backwardness of the lessfavoured regions. Article 174 Treaty of Lisbon (2010): In order to promote its overall harmonious development, the Union shall develop and pursue its actions leading to the strengthening ofits economic, social and territorial cohesion. In particular, the Union shall aim at reducing disparities between thelevels of development of the various regions and the backwardness of the least favoured regions. 7

What is a region? Eurostat has developed a classification of territorial units for statistics (NUTS). Cohesion policy takes into account the NUTS 2 regions which include from 800000 to 3000000 inhabitants. Currently 276 NUTS 2 regions in the EU. 8

EU Cohesion Policy 2014-2020: 1/3 of the EU budget The reforms agreed for the 2014-2020 period are designed to maximise the impact of the available EU funding. GROWTH OVERALL EU 2014-2020 BUDGET 1 082 billion 67.5% 32.5% Other EU policies Agruculture Research External Etc. COHESION POLICY 351.8 billion 730.2 billion 9

Cohesion Policy delivers the Europe 2020 strategy Launched in March 2010: Follow-up to the Lisbon Agenda (2000 and 2005). A strategy from the European Commission for smart, sustainable and inclusive growth over the next 10 years Smart agenda: innovation; education; digital society. Sustainability agenda: climate, energy, and mobility. Inclusive agenda: employment and skills; fighting poverty and social exclusion. 10

Cohesion policy supports the 2014-2020 Commission's political priorities Cohesion policy is part of the European Structural & Investment Funds (ESI Funds) The ESI Funds are the EU s main investment policy tool: EUR 454 billion allocated in 535 programmes Jobs, Growth and Investment / Digital Single Market / Energy Union and Climate / Internal Market / Economic and Monetary Union / EU-US Free Trade / Justice and Fundamental Rights / Migration / EU as a Global Actor / Democratic change 11

Five European Structural & Investment Funds (ESI Funds) working together PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT European Agriculture Fund for Rural Development Cohesion Fund European Social Fund European Regional Development Fund European Maritime and Fisheries Fund Common rules for ESI Funds Simplified cost options. E-governance. Eligibility rules. Financial instruments. CLLD- Community Led Local Development. 12

Proportion of ESI Funds in public investment 13

Investment Plan for Europe The European Commission's Investment Plan focuses on removing obstacles to investment, providing visibility and technical assistance to investment projects and making smarter use of new and existing financial resources. To achieve these goals, the plan is active in three areas: - mobilising investments of at least 315 billion in 3 years - supporting investment in the real economy - creating an investment-friendly environment. The European Fundfor StrategicInvestments (EFSI) drives the Investment Plan for Europe. 14

3 funds to invest in growth and jobs COHESION POLICY FUNDING DELIVERED THROUGH 3 FUNDS EUROPEAN REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT FUND EUROPEAN SOCIAL FUND COHESION FUND 356.5bn COHESION POLICY FUNDING EXPECTED PUBLIC & PRIVATE NATIONAL CONTRIBUTIONS LIKELY IMPACT OF COHESION POLICY 500bn + 15

Investing in all EU regions ALL EU REGIONS BENEFIT LEVEL OF INVESTMENT 181 billion for less developed regions GDP < 75% of EU-27 average 27% of EU pop. ADAPTED TO LEVEL OF DEVELOPMENT 38bn for transition regions GDP 75-90% of EU-27 average 12% of EU pop. 57bn for more developed regions GDP > 90% of EU-27 average 61% of EU pop. 16

Cohesion Policy Funding 2014-2020 ( 356.5 bn) 181.3 bn Less developed regions 38.0 bn Transition regions 57.4bn More developed regions 10.1 bn European territorial cooperation 0.4 bn Urban innovation actions 3.2 bn Youth employement initiative (top-up) 63.3 bn Cohesion fund 1.6 bn Specific allocation for outermost and sparsely populated regions 1.2 bn Technical assistance 17

Budget allocations per Member State (2014-2020) Total EU allocations of cohesion policy 2014-2020 (billion, current prices) 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 BE BG CZ DK DE EE IE EL ES FR HR IT CY LV LT LU HU MT NL AT PL PT RO SI SK FI SE UK 18

The method: Programming, Partnership and Shared Management Common Strategic Framework Partnership Agreements Operational Programmes Management of programmes/ Selection of projects Monitoring/ Annual reporting 19

3 authorities to implement Cohesion Policy A managing authority to implement the operational programme, and a monitoring committee to oversee it. A certification body to verify the statement of expenditure and the payment applications before their transmission to the Commission. An auditing body for each operational programme to supervise the efficient running of the management and monitoring system. 20

11 thematic objectives Research and Innovation 1 Combating climate change 5 Employment and Mobility 8 Information and Communication technologies 2 Environment and resource efficiency 6 Social inclusion 9 Competitiveness of SMEs 3 Sustainable transport 7 Better education, training 10 Low-carbon economy 4 Better public administration 11 21

Concentration of investmentson 4 thematic priorities (ERDF) Less developed regions 12% 50% Transition regions 60% 15% More developed regions 80% 20% 1 Research and Innovation. 2 Information and Communication Technology (ICT). 3 Competitiveness of Small & Medium Sized Entreprises (SME)-greater use of Financial Instruments. 4 Transition to a low CO 2 emissions economy (energy efficiency & renewable energies). 22

Focus on results Monitoring Performance reserve 6% funding allocated in 2019 to programmes and priorities which have achieved 85% of their milestones. 23

Strong role for partners in programming & implementation European Code of Conduct on Partnership A common set of standards to improve consultation, participation and dialogue with partners during the planning, implementation, monitoring and evaluation stages of projects financed by all European Structural and Investment Funds. Partners: public authorities, trade unions, employers and NGOs and bodies responsible for promoting social inclusion, gender equality and non-discrimination. 24

Necessity of pre-conditions for an effective EU investment Thematic ex ante conditionalities Linked to the thematic objectives and investment priorities of Cohesion Policy and applied in relation to investments in the specific thematic area: strategic, regulatory and institutional pre-conditions, administrative capacity. General ex ante conditionalities Linked to horizontal aspects of programme implementation and apply across all ESI Funds: anti-discrimination policy, gender equality policy. 25

Examples of pre-conditions for EU funding National Transport strategy Environmental law compliance Public procurement system Business-friendly reforms Smart specialisation strategies INVESTMENT 26

Improving how funds are invested and managed Boosting administrative capacity High Level Group on Simplification Exchange of regional experts Integrity Pacts Task Force for Implementation Lagging regions initiative Training for experts on rules and regulations Regio Communities of Practitioners Action plan on public procurement 27

Role of the European Social Fund The ESF is Europe s main instrument for investing in people: by giving them better skills and better job prospects. Main priorities: To improve employment opportunities To promote education and life-long learning To enhance social inclusion and contribute to combating poverty To improve public services Total ESF allocation 2014-2020: 86.4 billion 28

ESF thematic concentration 20% of ESF resources in each Member State for social inclusion, fight against poverty and all forms of discrimination. Thematic concentration of each OP on up to 5 investment priorities (out of 19) for employment/mobility, education/training, social inclusion & institutional capacity. Less developed regions Transition regions More developed regions 60% 70% 80% 29

Youth Employment Initative (YEI) A budget of 6.4 billion for 2014-2020. In regions with a youth unemployment rate above 25%. Target group: Individuals "NEETs" young people that are: inactive or unemployed (+long-term); registered or not as jobseekers; residing in the eligible regions. First results: as at July 2016, 1.4 million young people are/have been covered by YEI-supported actions 399,000 persons completed a YEI intervention 243,200 young persons are in employment, education or training after the YEI support ended 30

Sustainable urban development: A priority for 2014-2020 At least 5% of European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) should be invested in integrated sustainable urban development at national level Integrated urban development strategies developed by cities to be implemented as Integrated Territorial Investment (ITI), a multi-thematic priority axis or a specific Operational programme. Projects are selected by the cities in line with the strategies. Urban-rural linkages have to be taken into account. Use of community-led local development approaches possible (CLLD): consulting local citizens' organisations. 31

Other instruments for Urban Development Innovative actions for sustainable urban development (from 2015) 0.37 bln. for 7 years to promote innovative and experimental projects. Calls for interest on annual basis. At least 50.000 inhabitants involved. Urban development network Direct dialogue between European Commission and cities implementing integrated urban development and innovative actions. Managed by the European Commission. URBACT continues (URBACT III) Programme within European Territorial Cooperation programme, all cities can apply. 32

Urban Agenda for the EU The 'Pact of Amsterdam', adopted on 30 May 2016, establishes the Urban Agenda for the EU and lays out its key principles 12 partnerships on 12 identified urban challenges Action plans designed focus on better implementation of existing EU policies Ensuring better access to and utilisation of European funds; Improving the EU urban knowledge base and stimulating the sharing of best practices and cooperation between cities. 33

European Territorial Co-operation (Interreg) 3 strands: Cross-border; Transnational; Interregional. Budget for 2014-20: 10.1bn = 2.9% of Cohesion Policy budget. Over 100 programmes, of which 60 are cross-border. 34

Transnational Cooperation 35

Cross-border Cooperation 36

Cross border review Challenges: diverging national legislations on either side of the border incompatible administrative processes, or simply lack of common territorial planning. Cross-BorderReview launched by DG REGIO structured around 3 pillars: 1. A study, to provide an inventory of critical border obstacles together with examples of how these have been addressed on certain borders; 2. An extensive public consultation; 3. 4 workshops with key stakeholders. 37

Macro-regional strategies EU Strategy for Baltic Sea Region; Danube Region; Adriatic & Ionian Region; Alpine Region Maritime Strategy for the Atlantic 38

EU and Solidarity Fund European Union Solidarity Fund (EUSF) established in 2002 following severe flooding in Central Europe. Financial aid for reconstruction. To cope with major natural disasters and express EU solidarity towards devastated areas. EUSF intervention so far in 70 cases of natural disasters (forest fires, earthquakes, storms, drought, floods). 24 European countries have benefitted so far from over 3.7 billion in aid. 39

Thanks to Cohesion Policy Results for the period 2007-2013: 346.5bn support provided 1 000 000 jobs created 1/3 of net job createdin the EU 250,000 SMEs supported. 5,000 km of new or reconstructed railroads. 30,000 km of new or reconstructedroads. Broadband access for 8.2 million more citizens. 5.9 million more people connected to new/improved supply of clean drinking water. ESF: 15 million participants per year in training. 40

Thanks to Cohesion Policy and ESI Funds: Expected results for the 2014-2020 period: 454 billion from the EU budget invested through 535 programmes ( 637 billion with national co-financing). 2 million companies will be directly supported 15 million households will have access to high-speed broadband thanks to ERDF Decrease of estimated annual greenhouse gas emissions of around 30 million tons of CO2 120 billion will be allocated to employment, social inclusion, education and training 41

EU Cohesion Policy 2014-2020: The key elements Link with EU 2020 Stategy. Coordinated use of five European Structural & Investment Funds. Target resources at key growth sectors. Set clear objectives and measure results. Ensure the right conditions for investment. Enhanced role for the European Social Fund. Stronger role for partners in planning, implementation and control. Integrated approach to territorial development. Reinforce cooperation across borders. 42