Title: Internationalisation
1 Internationalisation
2OPENCities Internationalisation Key Questions
- What do we mean by city internationalisation? Why
do cities seek to become more international? - What is the role of population internationalisatio
n in the process of becoming an international
city? - What are the promising practices that cities are
developing, and how do they work?
3Drivers for Internationalisation Globalisation
- Intensifying globalisation interconnection
new urban policy challenges - Nearly all sectors heavily contested through
international competition - Improved human mobility - cities subject to
dynamic population changes and immigration flows - Increasing trends towards an inter-governmental
approach to managing important policy issues - Specialisation within sophisticated global value
chains - Seamless global connectivity
- Attractive business environment
- Internationally appealing quality of life
- Retention and expansion of internationally
oriented traders/investors
4Internationalisation Target Groups
- INTERNATIONAL TALENT
- Corporate Employees
- Students
- Research and Development
- OECD Global War for Talent
All aspiring international cities must now see
talent retention and attraction as vital to their
internationalisation efforts, whether through
direct incentives, immigration assistance, social
and cultural support, or public-private
investment in research
5How do cities look to internationalise?
- Large cities - highly active and engaged, aim to
host a critical mass of activity, and make
international-facing orientation intrinsic to
policy-making mosaic. (e.g. Sao Paulo, Mumbai and
Istanbul) - Smaller cities look for distinctive cultural
niche or economic specialisation based on
established reputations with inherent
international implications. (e.g. Zurich,
Edinburgh and Boston) - Secondary cities aim to escape constraints of
national urban system by attracting investment,
events and people internationally. (e.g.
Manchester, Barcelona, Cape Town and Toronto) - Historical cities look to re-configure
international positioning, based on an indelible
legacy of seeking an international role (e.g.
Amsterdam, Venice)
Requirements for Internationalisation
- Organisational and fiscal capabilities
- Identifiable match between economic/social assets
and international demand - Strong, historically well-developed fields that
can generate the critical mass in other milieus
(economic, social and cultural) - Can have EXPLICIT (Madrid Global) and IMPLICIT
strategies (Vienna, cross-cutting approach)
6Internationalisation strategies
- Connectivity
- Develop competent infrastructural and logistics
platform for international trading activity. - Expansion of port provision
- Airport connectivity to meet projected demand
- Optimise inter-regional rail/road connectivity
- Cultural amenity
- Attract international-calibre cultural amenities
to serve local and international residents - Preferential access for artists and arts and
culture organisations - Cultivate a tangible international milieu
- Infrastructure and Land Use
- Improved physical built environment in central
cities, suburbs and Research Development parks - Stock of high-quality accommodation to host
international knowledge workers, - Comprehensive public transport to improve
commuting reliability - Creation of international zones with clusters
calibrated towards international sectors.
- Identity, Values, Character
- Explicit international branding orientation
- Create set of messages that re-adjust image among
international target groups - Aimed at investors, tourists, professional
foreign talent, international students or
sector-specific corporations - Galvanise citizens behind a common vision of
building a world class city.
7The role of Population Internationalisation
- Formation of international human capital in a
city is both a cause and effect of the location
of strong scientific, cultural and quality of
life amenities. - International migrants transmit their skillsets
and knowledge, driving up standards and enabling
local clusterings - Integration and co-existence of diverse
international populations can be a key shaper of
urban competitive advantage
Diverse, well-educated international population
Emergence of high-quality scientific, cultural
and quality of life provision
8What initiatives can cities take to support
internationalisation ?
- Zoning to encourage the construction high quality
inner-city housing (Dubai) - Personal tax incentives - public realm
improvements coupled with business benefits
(Zurich) - Facilitate an international student community -
promote higher education as a critical asset and
export. (Melbourne) - Introduce a team of international branders and
networkers to create an image of a compelling
business and Meetings Incentives Conventions
Exhibitions (MICE) destination. (Miami) - Explicit global branding strategies (Madrid and
Amsterdam)
9Madrid
- One of the worlds most comprehensive
internationalisation strategies, orienting its
entire economic development strategy around
global forces. - Madrids updated 2008-2011 strategy - aims to
emerge as key gateway city to rapidly developing
(Spanish Speaking) Latin American markets, become
the third city in Europe (behind London and
Paris), and a leading partner with emerging Asian
cities.
Madrid Global - Strategy and International
Action Office
- An internationalisation bureau, formed in 2007,
which coordinates municipal diplomacy,
international projects, and leverages of
international activities of Madrid-based
institutions and firms - Collaborates with key public and private bodies
to carry out strategic projects to improve
international perceptions of Madrids competitive
advantage and real strengths - Broader objectives to unite all stakeholders
around international vision, attract global
events, international institutions and
international mass media exposure - EUR 8.5 million budget for 2009
- Example projects
- Houses such as Asian House, Arab House and
Israel House to spur cultural co-existence - Madrid Global City 2010 Foundation to prepare and
manage the citys participation in the 2010
Shanghai Expo
10Vienna
- Since 1989 and EU enlargement, new geo-political
and spatio-economic motivations to
internationalise its business and population
base. - Aims to compete with rival cities for gateway
status - Prague, Berlin and Bratislava high
availability of well-qualified knowledge workers,
excellent infrastructure, outstanding quality of
life, and favourable tax framework. - Strategy builds upon image as a meeting point of
East and West promoted through global liaison
offices.
- Vienna Business Agency (VBA) - drives innovation,
provides professional consulting and global city
marketing.
- Examples of internationalisation policies
- Leading integration of Danube economic zone
institutionalised co-operation of 22 cities in
areas of tourism marketing strategy, culture and
infrastructure. - New Vienna Immigration Commission
consensus-built organisation arguing in favour of
soft mechanisms to attract and retain highly
qualified immigrants. - Enhanced links with Bratislava - externalised
several cross-border projects focused on
sustainable industrial development and transport
infrastructure
11Campaign for Migrant Entrepreneurs Vienna's
economy speaks all languages (2009)
- Campaign looks to drive a new generation of
entrepreneurs that are proactive traders,
internationally minded and multi-lingual. Vienna
is an incubator of good practical initiatives in
this area. - Run by Vienna Chamber of Commerce and the VBA
280,000 - part-funded by EU
- Exhibition in 10 languages of Success knows no
boundaries - conveyed through street ads,
building projections and transport posters. - Multi-lingual campaign website www.VorteilVielfalt
.at (advantage diversity) - Establishment of a dedicated advice and service
point within VBA, MINGO Migrant Enterprise
(MINGO Move in and grow)
12Amsterdam
- Looks to preserve its regional strength in
business services, insurance, advertising, law
and management consultancy, and fully regain its
international functions. 2006 strategy
prioritises (re)placing Amsterdam among the top
five most popular cities in Europe by 2030. - Reasserting liberal and cosmopolitan credentials,
new policies to improve openness to wider range
of populations and business. Focus on utilising
untapped potential of emerging markets (esp.
Indian and Chinese firms)
- 2008 opening of Expat Centre in the citys World
Trade Centre to provide a one-stop shop for
arriving high-skilled migrants full support on
taxes, healthcare, education - New fund created to support nine large scale
events such as the Amsterdam India Festival -
that will raise international profile as a
creative, innovative trading city
13Lessons for InternationalisationWhat are the
benefits of an explicit internationalisation
strategy?
- Creates a single, coherent framework within which
all other development policy can be set - Sends a clear message to all stakeholders about
the underlying philosophy of the city
administration in relation to the mega-trends
associated with globalisation - Creates an environment of confidence and
stability whereby stakeholders can act according
to well-defined long-term goals and pathways. - Ensures that all aspects of the city
administration are working towards the same
long-term targets. - Helps the city to achieve its full potential and
enjoy the maximum benefits from a globalising
world.
14- 10 Most Important Points for Internationalisation
- Base strategy on thorough, all-encompassing prior
research - Identify and foster niche specialisations
- Build a strong, stable business environment
- Ensure the plan covers all themes - events,
firms, institutions and populations - Engage local stakeholders and formalise
relationships - Use mechanisms that ensure mutually beneficial
interaction with international actors - Communicate - promote the benefits to the citys
people and continue to upskill domestically - Consolidate the city administration to avoid
duplication and gain visibility - Plan for the long term - internationalisation
takes decades - Monitor, evaluate and improve the plan at regular
intervals as part of an iterative process
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