Title: Governance for Economic Development in Auckland
1Governance for Economic Development in Auckland
- David Wilson
- Director
- Institute of Public Policy
2Agenda
- Globalisation and Glocalisation
- Economic development
- The City-region as a focus for economic
development policy and action - International comparisons
- Montreal
- Toronto
- London
- Auckland
- History
- Current arrangements
- 5 Principles for the improved governance of
economic development in Auckland -
3Globalisation and Glocalisation
- Globalisation describes a process where now,
more than ever in history, people are connected.
They are connected through trade, employment,
increased communications technologies, cultural
exchange, sports and migration, to name a few.
4- In this framework, especially over the last few
years, globalization has seen the phenomenon of
glocalism emerge with force. Localities (national
and sub-national entities in various shapes and
forms) have begun to interact increasingly with
"flows" of capital, technologies, goods, people,
and cultural values generated by global actors.
The localities have also increasingly begun to
dialogue with each other, to build networks and
to set up "horizontal" alliances. Through
increasingly dense and complex relationships and
agreements among different local subjects (of
various types and at various levels public and
private, national and subnational), a process has
begun that we could define "horizontal
globalization." (Bressi, 2003, p5)
5Economic development what are we trying to
achieve?
- Positively shaping the economy amidst global
pressures - Competitive and comparative advantages
- Particularity
- Specialisations
- Sustainability and resilience
- Positive externalities
- Public good outcomes
6- what we are trying to achieve is a process
whereby we can shape our economy so that it
builds on our strengths, takes advantage of our
particularity (social, cultural, environmental,
and economic), creates comparative and
competitive advantages and thus provides
prosperity and opportunity for our citizens.
7Three waves of local economic development
Source World Bank (2004) Local Economic
Development A Primer - Developing and
Implementing Local Economic Development
Strategies and Action Plans. A knowledge Product
of Cities of Change, October, Washington, DC.,
cited in Local Governance and the Drivers of
Growth OECD (2005).
8The City-region as a focus for economic
development policy and action
- New regionalism and other theories
- Unit of competitiveness in global market
- Scale and scope and critical mass
- Policy implementation
- Where ED efforts/implementation can be organised
better - Top down and bottom up
- Some things are regional some are local
- implementation is the key
9RED and LED
- The two are wholly interconnected and
interdependent - Regional ED
- focus at a level consistent with the
City-regions functional economy. - Gain momentum, build critical mass and support
- Regional positioning and branding,
- Major events
- tackle problems of regional significance that are
enablers of economic development hard
infrastructure - transport, ports, broadband, connectivity
- urban design and amenity
- soft infrastructure that build networks and
systems of collaboration and critical mass, such
as - increasing skills and human capital,
- Innovation systems
- working to mitigate against weaknesses in the
regional labour market - Building regional investment propositions
- identifying and supporting clusters and strategic
industry sectors that are export capable and are
either fundamental to the regional economy or
have the potential to be.
10LED
- Business development one to one work with
businesses such as - business retention and expansion programmes,
- training and advice,
- market and competitive intelligence
- Public policy
- Building Capacity and critical mass
- e.g. sector strategies, clusters, science parks,
incubators, export assistance - Monitor the local economy and provide timely
advice on economic trends to both the public and
private sectors - endogenous development opportunities such as
- building on the natural, cultural and/or social
capital inherent in the locality to provide
economic opportunity - working with communities to mitigate structural
problems within, and improve access to, the
labour market and local economies - making the necessary local business connections
to embed exogenous investment in local economies - supporting innovation and entrepreneurship.
- Town centre regeneration and urban amenity
- Addressing poverty by providing opportunity
- Cross border co-operation and ED best practice
up-scaling
11- The chief drivers of economic regions are
well-known larger drivers of change such as
globalisation, technology development, freer
trade, public sector reform, increased mobility,
and the new logistics of trade and exchange.
Fundamentally, economic-regions offer a scale and
critical mass of resources at the sub-national
level, combined with a sufficiently coherent
geography to address the interaction with these
wider drivers of change. (Clark 2004)
12London
- Labour government has favoured a model of
governance for economic development from below - Increasing power at local level
- Encouraging partnerships
- Modernisation programme 2 components
- New responsibility for local government
- Creation of regional development agency Greater
London Authority
13London
- Bennett et.al. (2004)
- The community strategy has been very widely
consulted on. More than half of all authorities
have had major contributions from at least 12
agents across the private, public and community
voluntary sectors. It is clear that local
authorities are indeed operating within a wide
process of governance that requires complex
liaison with many other agents, public, private,
and community bodies. - Greater London Authority
- The mayor has the responsibility of preparing
strategies regarding transportation, spatial
development and economy, as well as setting its
own budget and budgets for the Authoritys
functional entities Transport for London, the
London Development Agency (LDA), the Metropolitan
Police Authority and London Fire and Emergency
Planning Authority.
14London
- GLA main tasks are to influence mainstream
funding, provide strategic advice and promote
partnerships. - The GLA does not have the power to implement The
London Plan. Implementation power is
decentralized and is sitting at the local level
with the boroughs of London and the City of
London (Greg Clark, 2006). - The regional agenda has been shown so far to have
little impact on local government or LSPs Local
Strategic Partnerships. Suggesting some level of
dissonance between regional and local
socio-spatial scales of organisational activity.
(Bennett et.al., 2004, p.268)
15Toronto
- The reform led by the Conservative government of
Ontario was representative of a hands off type
of approach. Improve efficiency to reduce taxes
which will in turn attract investment. - Decentralise services from the province to the
municipalities with a forced amalgamation of
municipalities 7 located in the most central
part of the Greater Toronto Area. - At the end of the amalgamation process, there are
no government entities doing local economic
development at a comparable scale to that of the
London Boroughs. City of Toronto 2 503 281
people, one municipality (census, 2006) - Attempt at regional governance largely failed
- Growing poverty in some neighbourhoods.
16Montreal
- 1996 to 2003 reforms forced amalgamation of 27
municipalities located in the most central part
of Montreal creation of 27 boroughs under the
new city - 2001 Implementation of the Montreal Metropolitan
Community. - The MMC was created to address Metropolitan
regional issues and was given a strategic
planning role including Economic Development. - 2003 start of the de-amalgamation process.
17Montreal
- Views on the MMC
- Fourot (2006) affirms that observers of municipal
governance believe that the MMC does not greatly
influence political/administrative dynamics of
the city. This may be explained as the
organisation has limited resources (Boudreau et.
Al. 2004) and the current complex governance
structure in Montreal complicates any
coordination of activities with other actors. - Some consider the MMC as a good first step
towards metropolitan governance (OECD, 2004).
Collin (2002) believes that the Metropolitan
Community of Montreal has not yet found its
effective, influential form and is still
experimenting. The main challenge of the MMC is
developing effective link with the institutional
structure to implement their mandate (OECD, 2004)
and strengthening its legitimacy with regard to
the metropolitan population.
18Montreal
- Traditionally, the Quebec provincial government
has recognised local/community-based initiatives
as an important tool for economic development - Community Economic Development Corporations still
present after the reforms and de-amalgamation
through the boroughs and other local agencies
funded by provincial government. - No apparent link between local agencies and
Montreal Metropolitan Community (Morin and
Hanley, 2004)
19- a key institutional axiom is that solutions have
to be context-specific and sensitive to local
path-dependencies. (Amin, 1999)
20Auckland Development Patterns
- Tamaki makau rau place of a thousand lovers
- Place of attraction and opportunity
- Common themes/challenges
- Infrastructure
- lack of Funding
- Ad hoc development
- Population growth
- Fragmented development
- Potted histories
- Problem of political boundaries
21Auckland ED efforts today
- Beginnings of structures that represent regional
ED function AREDA, AREDF, Auckland Plus, GUEDO - Disconnection between levels of activity
- horizontal and vertical
- Institutional thin-ness
- discreet activities and agencies
- Top down policy drivers
- Little reflexivity
- Almost non existent flexibility
- Luke warm cross sector engagement
- Lack of regional decision-taking ability and
influence - Lack of integration of programmes
- Cooperation sometimes, collaboration less,
coordination poor - lack of trust early days??
225 Principles for the improved governance of
economic development in Auckland
- Glocalism
- Build local implementation capacity
- Cooperation and collaboration
- organise
- Devolution and Subsidiarity
- empower
- Functionality and Flexibility
- Support economic geography/rationale
- Fit-for-purpose governance arrangements
- Integration
- One plan Provide a focussed easy to follow
action plan for the City-region regional
priorities
23Some suggestions
- More empowered arms length REDA with
- cross sector governance
- An organising for RED mandate
- Horizontal and vertical reach in partnership and
influence - A long term funding base
- Build local delivery and governance capacity
- As above but for LED
- especially in business development programmes but
also - Framing investment opportunities
- Developing local economies
- Project management
- Developing new institutional arrangements for the
delivery of ED projects - An EDA for Auckland City