Title: The Global Economy a role for Dublin
1The Global Economy a role for Dublin
-
Martin Cronin - 24 May 2005
2Role of City-Regions
- Growing recognition in Europe that major
city-regions play a central role in a modern
knowledge based economy. - e.g. UK study found that knowledge based sectors
are heavily concentrated in or near the centres
of major cities - Research evidence suggests that the reputation
and attractiveness of major cities has a
determining influence on the competitiveness of
the economy as a whole. - Dublin is Irelands only global centre and has a
pivotal role to play in Irelands continued
economic performance and development.
3Big fleas have little fleas upon their backs to
bite them- And little fleas have littler fleas
and so on ad infinitum
Dublin Cork, Limerick, Galway Waterford, Sligo,
Athlone, Dundalk
4Big fleas have little fleas upon their backs to
bite them- And little fleas have littler fleas
and so on ad infinitum
- Global nodes London, Paris, New York, Tokyo,
- European engines Munich, Frankfurt,
- Brussels, Rome, Madrid
-
- Potential Metropolitan Growth Areas (MGAs)
Helsinki, Manchester, Dublin, Turin, Oslo - Potential MGAs Warsaw, Budapest, Lyon, Antwerp
- Weak MGAs Bordeaux, Porto, Krakow, Riga, Cork
5GDP per capita 2001 EU cities ()
1 Frankfurt 74,465 2 Karlsruhe 70,097 3 Pari
s 67,200 4 Munich 61,360 5 Dusseldorf 54,053
6 Stuttgart 53,570 7 Brussels 51,106 8 Copen
hagen 50,775 ......................... 15 Ams
terdam 38,203 16 Munster 38,149 17 Wiesbaden 3
7,454 18 Dublin 36,591 19 Vienna 36,572 20
Stockholm 35,733
Source Office of Deputy Prime Minister,
Competitive European Cities, Jan 2004
6Ratio of GDP per Capita City vs. National
Frankfurt/Germany 3.8 Paris/France 3.5 Brusse
ls/Belgium 2.6 Copenhagen/Denmark 1.9 Amsterdam/N
etherlands 1.8 Vienna/Austria
1.8 Helsinki/Finland 1.7 Stockholm/Sweden 1.7 Lo
ndon/UK 1.7 Dublin/Ireland
1.5 Rome/Italy 1.5 Berlin/Germany 1.2
7Dublins Ranking as Business Location (Source
Cushman Wakefield Healey Baker, European Cities
Monitor 2004)
- OVERALL 12th
- Access to Markets (key factor) 23rd
- Availability of Qualified Staff - 15th
- Cost of Staff 7th
- Quality of Life 13th
- Climate Government Creates 1st
- When asked which cities were doing the most to
improve themselves, only 5 - percent of those surveyed cited Dublin compared
to 22 percent for Barcelona - and 17 percent for Madrid.
8Critical Success Factors
- Access/connectivity
- Highly Skilled Workforce
- Innovation
- Diversity of Enterprise Base
- Quality of Life
9Access / Connectivity
- Dublin ranked 23rd, performing poorly on both
external and - internal transport facilities
- Public transport improvement was the single most
demanded improvement by companies surveyed - Lengthy delays in making decisions on key
infrastructure - priorities
- Rail link to airport first feasibility study
commissioned in 1996 - Integrated city centre rail network
- Second airport terminal
- Eastern by-pass
- Outer orbital route
- Also delays in delivering major infrastructure
projects once they have been approved
10Access/Connectivity - Key Developments
- Luas
- QBCs on key radial routes
- Dublin Port Tunnel to open early 2006
- 810m M50 upgrade approved by An Bord Pleanála
earlier this month - Many additional air routes from Dublin airport
providing direct connectivity to growing number
of international destinations - Unrivalled international telecoms connectivity
- Introduction of 10 year multi-annual capital
envelope for transport a welcome development - Proposals for new fast-track planning procedures
for major infrastructural projects due this week
11Skilled Workforce
- Overall stock of secondary graduates in Ireland
is poor - Low level of staff training
- Increased emphasis on ICT required
- But
- Ireland has the youngest population in Europe
with over 40 under 25 - Irelands total investment in knowledge increased
by an average annual rate of 10 over the past
decade compared with averages of around 3 by the
EU and the OECD. - Â
7.2 in Dublin have MA/PhD compared with 4.6
nationally
Source Census 2002
12European Innovation Index
13Innovation CSETs
- Three of the six awarded to date are in Dublin.
- Centre for Human Proteomics (RCSI)
- Centre for Research on Adaptive Nanostructures
and Nanodevices (UCD/TCD) - Centre for Telecommunications Value-Chain-Driven
Research (TCD)
14Diversity of Enterprise Base
- The cities which are most successful in
responding to economic change are those least
dependent on a single sector - Dublin is host to a cluster of leading companies
across a range of sectors including Financial
Services, Life Sciences, International Services
and ICT. Their activities include RD,
manufacturing and services. - ICT Bell Labs IBM Microsoft Iona
- Financial Services Citigroup Merrill Lynch
AIB - Life Sciences Wyeth Biotrin Megazyme
- Other Services eBay Google Riverdeep
15Quality of Life
- Culture, environment, architectural and housing
quality and city centre facilities - 11th most expensive city in the world (6th in
Europe) - - 22nd in the world (14th in Europe) on
the QOL indicator - House prices in Ireland grew by 179 from
1997-2004 - (147 in Britain, 131 in Spain)
- Increased congestion and longer journey times
-
- Need to implement integrated land use and
transport policies
16Quality of Life Positives
- Vibrant and cosmopolitan city
- Wide range of sport and leisure pursuits
- Active theatre scene Gate, Abbey, Andrews Lane
-
- Rich cultural heritage Joyce, Beckett, Wilde
17Trajectory of the Global Economy
- Uncertainties
- Exchange rates
- Geopolitical issues
- EU Accession countries
- Oil Prices
- Property prices
- 2. Certainties
- Globalisation
- China, India
- Technological progress
- Accelerating pace of change
- .
18The Case for Change..Ireland in Transition
Domestic Cost
Role of Knowledge
Shift to Services
Globalisation
2005
- Intense Competition for both
- Low Ground
- High Ground
?
19ServicesExamples of sectors and activities that
offer significant opportunities for exploitation
by indigenous enterprises and for increased
inward investment
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
20 High Value ManufacturingExamples
of sectors and activities that offer
significant opportunities for exploitation by
indigenous enterprises and for increased inward
investment
x
x
x
x
x
21Ahead of the Curve - Enterprise Strategy Group
Comparative Advantage
Competitiveness
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