Title: Regional Governance, Institutions and Development
1Regional Governance, Institutions and Development
- From
- Michael Danson and Geoff Whittam(University of
Paisley-Scotland) -
2Setting the Stage
- Regionalism and regional-based economic
development initiatives are becoming increasingly
important, particularly in Europe. - These changes are affecting the role of
governance, institutions, institution-building
and institutional change in regional development - These changes are interconnected with a number of
characteristics which first came into the
economics and geographic literature in the 1980s.
3characteristics which first came into the
economics and geographic literature in the 1980s
- institutional capacity,
- thickness,
- the invisible factors in regional development,
- networking, and
- industrial districts.
4The Challenge
- How to adapt these new changes and address
- Innovative Economy how to succeed in the new
economy and ensure everyone participates - Livable Community how to create communities
where people want to live - Community-based Regionalism how to ensure
inclusive and equitable communities - Governance Reform How to reform government to
make it more responsive
Collaborative Economics, Inc
5Institutions, networks and partnerships
- generally seen to be the answer to regional
problems - subject to policies and procedures established by
governing authority - This is the reason for our concentration on
governances.
6Governance
- concerned with how regional economic development
is affected by - democracy,
- participation,
- regional self-determination,
- public-private partnerships and
- accountability.
7Decentralization, Devolution, or Democracy?
- Some institutions which were created in order to
improve economic growth have started changing
into organizations whose primary roles are now
the coordination of economic development
activities rather than being directly involved in
development. - The primary example used by your authors is the
regional development authority or RDA which is
used extensively many parts of the world,
especially in Europe. - Much of the change has been caused by what is
called decentralization which is often
characterized as an increase in democracy. In
this sense some think of the central governing
authority giving way to democracy and
self-determination. - The other side of regionalism is the trend toward
the federal or central government relieving
itself of responsibility for policy areas that
have become a liability.
8three primary reasons for these changes
- 1) the federal or central government lacks the
resources to manage them effectively, - 2) because the economic burden can be off-loaded
by passing them onto lower tiers of government,
or - 3) because the political burden of being
responsible for unsuccessful policies is deemed
to be high.
9Industrial Renewal
- Is a basic requirement for an economy to keep
developing - can refer to
- innovation and development within established
industries, - the attraction of new industries through such
measures as direct foreign investment, - the formation of new indigenous firms,
- or a combination of all three strategies
10problems associated with industrial renewal
- grown over the last two decades in what can be
described as "mature" economies. - is tied specifically to the decline of
traditional manufacturing and extraction
industries within these "mature" economies - focus on governance structures,
- industrial districts,
- networks and
- partnerships.
11Mississippi as an Example
12With a little more perspective
13innovation
- The changing nature of innovation within
industrial production can be cited as the
principal cause of the accelerated need for
policies to tackle the problems associated with
industrial renewal
14The effect on mature economies
- the "Fordist" techniques of production and
"Taylorist" methods of scientific management have
been replaced with new production methods such as
flexible specialization - the increasing internationalization of business
organization has led to the growth of mass
production methods in low-cost countries or
low-cost regions
15New Reality
- Globalization of business changes the meaning of
place - New technologies changes time and space
- Changing demographics changes the profile of
leadership - New reality The anonymity of civic leadership
16SME
- The development of new methods of production such
as flexible specialization has coincided with a
growth in the small medium enterprise (SME)
sector in the "mature" economies
17SME is not just European or third world
- Americas 25 million SMEs employ 53 of the
private work force, generating more than 50 of
the nations GDP and most importantly 75 of the
net new jobs added to the economy. SMEs in the
US also represent 96 of all US exporters and
account for 35 of federal contracts. (Source
U.S. SBA (Small Business Administration). - How does the SBA define a small business?
- A. SBA has established a size standard for most
industries in the economy. The most common size
standards are as follow - 500 employees for most manufacturing and mining
industries - 100 employees for all wholesale trade industries
- 6 million for most retail and service industries
- 28.5 million for most general heavy
construction industries - 12 million for all special trade contractors
- 0.75 million for most agricultural industries
- About one-fourth of industries have a size
standard that is different from these levels.
They vary from 0.75 million to 28.5 million for
size standards based on average annual revenues
and from 100 to 1500 employees for size standards
based on number of employees. Several SBA
programs have either alternative or unique size
standards, such as the Small Business Investment
Company Program.
18The Evolving Economy
The first 100 years of our countrys history
were about who could build the biggest, most
efficient farm. The second 100 years were
about the race to build efficient factories.
The third 100 years are about ideas. -- Seth
Godin Fast Company, August 2000
19New Growth Theory and Innovation
Paul Romer says ideas are the primary source of
economic growth. Recipes (new ideas) combine
ingredients (resources) in new and different ways
to yield more valuable economic results. The
recipes come from the innovation process.
20How do Ideas Come About?
- We know 3 very pertinent things
- Ideas require intelligent seeding
- Ideas that sit on the shelf are worthless. Ideas
have to move, grow, and touch lots of people and
businesses to provide benefits. - Universities/colleges, traditional sites of RD
and smart people, are certainly part of the
equation.
21Habitat for Innovation and Entrepreneurship
What distinguishes Silicon Valley is not its
scientific advances or technology
breakthroughs. Instead, its edge derives from a
habitat or environment that is tuned to turning
ideas into products and taking them rapidly to
market by creating new firms. The Silicon Valley
Edge
22We are heregt Industrial districts
- . Industrial districts, networks and partnerships
are regarded as new methods of production - Industrial districts were noted by Marshall in
Principles of Economics in 1890. They have
recently been "rediscovered" in many regions of
mature economies. - Industrial districts can now be analyzed as "new"
types of industrial productive systems, because
they very different than the traditional (new
tradition) neo-classical notion of the firm. - There is an increased awareness of institutional
capacity, governance and institutional change in
regional development
23definition of industrial districts
- "a socio-territorial entity which is
characterized by - the active presence of both a community of people
and a population of firms - in one naturally and historically bounded area.
- In the district, unlike in other environments,
such as manufacturing towns, community and firms
tend to merge. T - he fact that the dominant activity is an
industrial one differentiates the industrial
district from a generic economic
region.(Becattini (1990, 38)) - Becattini clearly identifies is the importance of
- socio-political factors,
- the links between suppliers and clients, and
- the impact of the community in enhancing the
performance of firms within industrial districts.
24three broad approaches have been adopted to
analyze these "new" forms of industrial
productive systems
- the transactions costs approach, a neo-classical
framework developed by Williamson through Coase - The "embeddedness" school.
- critical of the neo-classicists
- Emphasize the essential dynamism of the districts
- Case approaches focusing on political and social
aspects of individual case studies
25Industrial Districts and Marshall
- arose primarily out of his empirical studies of
the steel and textile industries - within these industries, the greater the
opportunities that existed to split up the
production process, the greater the chances were
that specialist firms would develop. - benefits of production accruing to the individual
large firm were differentiated between internal
economies of scale (dependent on the organization
and efficiency of the management of the
individual firms) and those arising to the
industry as a whole, or external economies
(dependent on the general development of the
industry)
26According to Marshall
- external economies "can often be secured by the
concentration of many small businesses of a
similar character in particular localities or as
is commonly said, by the localisation of
industry" (Marshall 1916, 26). - In effect this localization of industry can be an
alternative to larger size for the individual
enterprise - And a hint to how SMEs can be particularly
important
27Specialization and the small firm.
- To Marshall, specialization allowed firms to
operate at smaller levels because localization
economies were usually more significant than
internal scale economies - It was the combination of localization and
specialization that gave rise to the notion of
industrial districts. - Although Marshall noted that large firms
frequently located in industrial districts, he
also added that small firms benefit from external
economies from being located in industrial
districts by providing inputs and specialty
finishing
28Marshall and Constructive Cooperation Trust and
cooperation
- Marshall coined the term "constructive
cooperation" to identify a willingness to
cooperate with similar firms in sharing
information and efforts to obtain better markets,
materials, and capital without become cartels
that seek to control prices. - Marshall saw constructive cooperation among
competitors as a particularly British trait. - This form of cooperation requires extensive trust
and could not occur without out it.
29Organization and Cooperation
- Organization is the general rule which underpins
Marshalls analysis of the entire production
process. - Cooperation in the sharing of knowledge (which
leads to increased innovation) and the
development of an industrial atmosphere (which
results in the establishment of new organizations
that facilitate production and trade, namely
constructive cooperation) both derive from this
general rule. - Implicit in Marshall is an evolutionary approach
to industrial organization that links between
Marshalls original industrial districts and
contemporary industrial districts. - The connection is the development of trust and
cooperation that we have identified within
Marshalls original industrial districts.
30Evolving Relationships and Trust
- In Marshalls view, social institutions arise in
industrial districts and trust evolves dependent
upon - tradition,
- custom,
- habit and
- legal restraint.
- The establishment of such social institutions
help SMEs gain external economies of scale and
get advantages from being close-knit
geogragphically and economically.
31Gains from Trust and Cooperation
- product innovation,
- the sharing of knowledge, information, productive
capital and even personnel - an "industrial atmosphere" and the establishment
of "constructive cooperation." - constructive cooperation and trust being achieved
without resort to formal enforcement mechanisms.
32Arrow on Trust and cooperation
- The achievement of a productive system based on
cooperation and trust undoubtedly leads to
economic efficiency and "is an important
lubricant of a social system." (Arrow, K. (1974)
The Limits of Organization. New York Norton.). - "Collective undertakings of any kind, not merely
governmental, become difficult or impossible not
only because A may betray B but because even if A
wants to trust B he knows that B is unlikely to
trust him"(Arrow, K. (1974) The Limits of
Organization. New York Norton.).
33Partnership and Regional Development
- In the 1970s and 80s, regional development
usually involved one agency deciding the
appropriate strategies and undertaking the
necessary steps to implement such initiatives. - Now, regional development bodies appear to be
essentially networked organizations, achieving
their objectives by working in partnership with
other public and private actors.
34An example National Rural Development
Partnership
- The National Rural Development Partnership (NRDP)
is a multi-faceted organization bringing together
partners from all levels of government as well as
private for profit and non-profit organizations
to address the needs of rural America.
35NRDP Structure
- The NRDP brings together partners from local,
state, tribal, and federal governments, as well
as from the for-profit and nonprofit private
sector. The NRDP has three main components
36The Partnership at the National Level
- National Rural Development Council
- Office of Community Development
- National Rural Development Coordinating
Committee - NRDP Task Forces
- Rural Policy Fellows Program
- National Federal Partners
37The Partnership at the State Level
- State Rural Development Councils (SRDCs) are
composed of the agencies and organizations that
play a part in developing the rural areas of that
state. As a result, federal, regional, tribal,
state, and local governments, along with the
non-profit and for-profit sectors, all play an
important role in the work of each State Council. - The State Rural Development Councils define their
own mission, structure, operating guidelines, and
action plan. SRDCs rely upon time and resources
volunteered by their partner members to address
critical community concerns and to respond to
fast-breaking opportunities. Currently, there are
38 State Councils.
38A Specific Example
- The Mississippi State Rural Development Council
hosted Regional Roundtable Discussions throughout
Mississippi in 2000 that attracted local, state,
and federal outreach groups interested in
addressing issues of concern to the state's rural
communities, including representatives from the
Appalachian Regional Commission. - MSRDC surveyed rural communities to determine
their interest in the topic selection, identified
speakers and partners, coordinated the time and
location of meetings, and scheduled facilities. - Tailored to address the concerns of the region
where they were held, the roundtables allowed
rural community leaders and citizens to network
with government officials, talk with resource
providers, and provide information about rural
concerns and recommendations to address those
concerns. - Participants incorporated the information
gathered through the roundtables into strategic
plans. This is the Community Development Project - Mississippi State Rural Development Council is
also working with the Mississippi State
University Extension Service, the Mississippi
Planning and Development District, USDA-Rural
Development, and the Tennessee Valley Authority
to implement the Community Development Project.
39Another Partnership?
- The GREATER STARKVILLE DEVELOPMENT PARTNERSHIP is
comprised of three member organizations which are
committed to developing a prosperous economy and
the highest quality of life in Starkville,
Mississippi Oktibbeha County. Member
organizations Starkville Area Chamber of
Commerce Starkville Convention Visitors
Bureau Oktibbeha County Economic Development
Authority
40East of England Development Agency
- EEDA plays an active role in a number of
successful initiatives with groups ranging from
community based partnerships to large-scale
projects like the Luton Vauxhall partnership
41Vauxhall Partnership
- When Vauxhall and its parent company GM Europe
announced in December 2000 that it was to close
its Luton Vectra production facility the East of
England Development Agency (EEDA), set up a
partnership group to tackle the impact of the
closure on the local economy of Luton as well as
on the employees at the plant who would lose
their jobs. The partnership brings together a
large number of organisations including Luton
Borough Council, Vauxhall, government agencies
and EEDA.
42Actions of the Vauxhall Partnership
- Retraining and Support Services The partnership
decided that the immediate need was to identify
the skills shortages in the local area, map the
skills of the Luton workforce and then determine
the retraining and re-skilling need for effective
redeployment. - Once this was completed the partnership moved
quickly to secure funding to put a retraining
program in place. - Almost 1.5 million, drawn from various sources
including the European Social Fund, EEDAs Skills
Development Fund, Vauxhall and the Governments
Rapid Response Fund, has been put into the
programme. The Employment Service has also funded
courses and altogether more than 1,000 employees
have been retrained.
43Actions of the Vauxhall Partnership
- Counselling Services A help centre on site at
the plant was set up to give workers access to
welfare and financial advice and assess their
retraining needs. A dedicated help desk for
Vauxhall workers will now be provided at Luton
town centres job centre. Employees have also
been able to get advice and support on how to
embark on new careers and preparing CVs. The
partnership also assisted the provision of
counselling services through a scheme run by the
Luton Health Action Zone.
44Partnership Panacea?
- the experience of the Third Italy, where
consensual networking appeared to be the secret
behind a thriving regional economy, has been well
publicized. - It is easy to see why partnership is construed as
the new panacea. - The motives of a development agency for linking
up with other public and private bodies may be a
combination of push and pull factors - on the one hand the search for functional
advantages, - on the other hand a constant quest for additional
resources from other public and private actors.
45Two important aspects of partnership
- Motives and interests of the partners involved
- May differ between public and private actors and
various tiers of government, and between
divergent economic interests, different time
perspectives, incompatible strategies, and
territorial politics. - Consequences for the participating organizations
- Who gets access to resources
- Who has most influence over the partnership
46links between networking and partnerships
- within the regional economic development
structure of the late twentieth century, there
arose a dominant partnership model approach that
stressed the possibility of realizing synergies
and capturing positive externalities through
formal networking.
47advantages of partnership
- Increasingly innovative policies and better
operational decisions - Increased continuity and consistency in policy
- Better Resolution of conflict and disagreement
- Coordination and integration of disparate actions
- Aggregation of separate budgets
- High level of strategic planning and decision
making
48Actions of the Vauxhall Partnership
- Support for Suppliers In December last year the
Regional Supply Network East launched an
excellence club to promote good performance and
working practices for East of England automotive
suppliers. To qualify for the 400 Club,
businesses have to score 400 or more in the
European Foundation for Quality Management
Excellence Model, which sets standards for
production processes, management techniques,
performance measurement and customer service.
49NETWORKING AND INDUSTRIAL DISTRICTS NEW TYPES OF
INDUSTRIAL ORGANIZATION
50Networking through Industrial Districts
- Policy strategies of RDAs are increasingly aimed
at developing organizations of small and medium
enterprises (SMEs) through "networking"
structures. - Such arrangements are often referred to as
industrial districts.
51The exact nature of these industrial districts
depend on
- Regional Governance
- Decentralization / regionalization of the country
- Local partnership
- Financial means
- Political debate. What type of support for
endogenous development?
52There are lots of claims being made
- About being part of a cluster
- About being part of a network
- About being part of an industrial district
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58Question
- What conditions are necessary for the
establishment of formal organizational structures
that will lead to firms cooperating within the
process of production and therefore real
networking?
59Scottish Enterprise
- The principal agency with the task for economic
management of the Scottish economy, Scottish
Enterprise (SE), has recently identified
networking arrangements among SMEs as a way to
achieve growth and hence job creation among them.
- acknowledges that there are problems with
existing networking agencies within the Scottish
economy - Seeks ways to encourage the effectiveness of both
formal and informal networking arrangements
60Two major problems
- Why does Scotland generate so few new ventures,
and - Why do those ventures that are created seldom
grow into substantial companies?
61Growth Rates
- low rates of enterprise creation , but
- growth of surviving enterprises was at least as
good in Scotland as elsewhere. - Conclusion problem was the overall birth rate,
with the policy implication being that measures
to expand the pool were more appropriate than
"picking winners."
62The Role of Networking
- to achieve the desired objective of new firm
formation is to be successful, an understanding
of the essential components of successful
networking is needed
63A key question
- whether new firms are conducive to the creation
of networking and industrial districts. - based on the best practice models identified in
regional economic regeneration strategies
elsewhere in Europe and in North America, these
strategies rely on trust and cooperation.
64Exchange requires some cooperation
- wherever exchange takes place, either on the
market or through firms, a degree of cooperation
takes place. - The division of labor, so crucial toThe Wealth of
Nations, is dependent on cooperation between the
parties involved
65cooperation and competition
- "Trading partners, derive mutual benefits from
cooperation in production from which their
incomes are ultimately derived, but they compete
over the proceeds of production because what one
gets the others cannot have. Every business
relationship is therefore by its nature both
rivalrous and cooperative" (Burchell and
Wilkinson 1997, 219).
66Opportunism
- Important issue is how to keep Opportunism out of
cooperative relationships - The costs of using the market mechanism can be
reduced by organizing production within the
structure of the firm (Coase, 1937). - Contracting arrangements can act as a means of
reducing the costs of coordination, but there are
costs involved in establishing and monitoring
contracts (Williamson 1993).
67Alternatives to Contracts
- Two norms are widely accepted.
- (1) Commitments are to be honoured in almost all
situations one does not welsh on a deal. - (2) One ought to produce a good product and stand
behind it" (Macaulay 1963, 63).
68Developing Trust
- Trust can evolve from cooperation
- Gambetta defines trust as "a particular level of
the subjective probability with which an agent
assesses that another agent or group of agents
will perform a particular action, both before he
can monitor such action (or independently of his
capacity ever to be able to monitor it) and in a
context in which it affects his own action"
(217).
69Gambettas Assumptions
- If probabilities can be calculated then there
must be some way to monitor behavior. - If behavior cant be monitored, how is
opportunism prevented? - Gambettas answer institutions will develop
which will ensure certain types of behavior
70Not just transaction costs
- literature on industrial districts identifies
trust and cooperation in a way that transcends
the notion of simply reducing transaction costs - "A carefully nurtured collective identity can
potentially provide the social fabric which
sustains cooperation in an industrial district as
in a corporation" (Best, 1990, 237) - This requires a relatively homogeneous system of
values and views
71The example of Third Italy
- History of strife before World War II
- Selective history recall
72Kinds of Trust
- Contractual trust is the trust that exists
between trading partners and that results in the
belief that goods will be delivered on time, be
of the required specification and be of the
agreed quantity and quality. - Competence trust refers to the belief that a
trading partner will fulfill a particular task. - Goodwill trust occurs when initiatives are
undertaken beyond the specific remit of a
contract goodwill trust extends beyond existing
relations and includes the transfer of new ideas
and new technology.
73From contractual trust to goodwill trust.
- . Policy delivery can be utilized to promote a
cultural change. - Collective action needs to be developed to
guarantee cooperation and trust within the
productive system. - Hodgsons example of seatbelts coercion plus
education
74Potential problem of coercion
- Over-reliance on coercion, however, may well lead
to distrust. - Actors may well question the amount they are
actually trusted if they have to be continually
monitored. - if one actor is able to exercise coercion over
another this suggests an unequal distribution of
power in the relationship. "It introduces an
asymmetry which disposes of mutual trust and
promotes instead power and resentment"
75A solution
- large organisations that are not able to make
membership compulsory must also provide some
noncollective goods in order to give potential
members an incentive to join - Group identity (dirty dozen example)
76Embeddedness
- Free rider problem
- Once established inter-firm relationships develop
norms of behavior, custom and practice facilitate
trust and cooperation, which can result in
"embeddedness (Granovetter 1985).
77The SEs Problem (sound familiar?)
- Scottish companies tend to be restricted to the
peripheral, low value added areas of the sector,
such as catering, supplies, labor-only contracts,
and maintenance. - Unable to integrate forward because of a lack of
market strength and too low on the value chain to
establish an export oriented sector of any note,
such companies realize few opportunities by
cooperating in an industrial cluster.
78Corporate venturing
- assistance to entrepreneurs or SMEs to exploit
new ideas, corporate restructuring through staff
creation of new independent businesses, and the
development of new profit centers and
subsidiaries to exploit new products, processes
and markets. - Major obstacles
- financing. Equity Gaps.
- the perception of entrepreneurs by the community
79What else reduced entrepreneurs?
- the very agencies established to promote business
start-ups lacked trust and cooperation in the
indigenous entrepreneurs under their charge. - dependency culture in which it was believed that
native Scots entrepreneurs could not be a dynamic
part of the regeneration process - AND
80Opposition to spin-offs and buy-outs
- There is evidence that RDAs and government
departments have been opposing management
spin-outs, effectively scuppering the opportunity
for technology based developments by sanctioning
the closure of RD laboratories in nationalized
industries, and dampening enthusiasm and support
for management/worker rescues of branch plant
closures (Strathclyde Regional Council 1988
Danson 1991).
81Hurdles
- Those who would have most difficulty establishing
a business elsewhere - the young, women and the
working class, appear to face higher hurdles in
Scotland than in the southeast of England and
beyond. - Lack of security and of alternative employment in
the event of failure, and the effects on family
life of creating a new firm are the major
concerns of potential entrepreneurs according to
the SE report (1993, 24).
82Solutions?
- Mentoring
- Knowing an entrepreneur is an important rocket
for changing someone from a potential to an
actual business creator. - Those who are most dissuaded from making the
transition are least likely to have a set of
relevant contacts
83The role of mulitnationals
- With an economy dominated by branch plants,
however, it is unclear how multinational
enterprises can be encouraged to adopt more
cooperative strategies, and so to become more
embedded into the Scottish economy.
84The Wheel of Local Development