Skip to main content

HOW CAN WALES TAKE ADVANTAGE OF EUROPE

Earlier this month, this blog examined the current state of European Structural Funding in Wales.

As the Welsh Assembly Government’s own data suggested, the £1.9 billion funding still has a long way to go to make a real step change to the economy of Wales, especially within our poorer communities.

However, whilst much of the policy focus in Wales on European grants has been on Convergence funding, there has been little focus on the multi-billion pound programmes run centrally by the European Commission.

That is why the recent inquiry by the National Assembly for Wales’ European and External Affairs Committee into Welsh participation in European Union programmes is to be welcomed. Focusing on the 7th Framework Programme for Research and Technological Development (FP7), the Lifelong Learning Programmes and the Competitiveness and Innovation Framework Programme, the committee examined how Wales was utilising the 60 billion euro budget available for these three key initiatives between 2007 and 2013.

As someone who has previously been involved in managing projects funded by these programmes, this report is long overdue. Having worked in Ireland in the 1990s, I saw, at first hand, how Irish business and academia took seriously the opportunities presented by these initiatives, especially in boosting their competiveness through research and innovation.

So what has been the performance of Wales within these programmes? Are we really taking advantage of the funding that could be made available to help the economy?

Unfortunately, the data seems to suggest that whilst has received 39 million euros under the FP7 programme, this amounts to only 2.1 per cent of the total funding received by organizations in the UK.

If Wales had received the amount of funding that it should get as proportion of it population, then another 50 million euros would have been allocated to research projects within Wales.
One could argue that Wales may be handicapped by being a small region and that it could not compete with the more prosperous parts of Europe where there is a higher concentration of research active organizations able and willing to take advantage of such funding.

Yet, research into the previous round of the Framework programme showed that whilst the amount of EU funding per head of population received by Wales was 16 euros, in Catalonia it was 185 euros and for Brittany, it was 218 euros. Flanders, with a population just over twice that of Wales, received three and half times more funding through the 6th Framework programme, an amount equivalent to 352 million euros.



Why is this happening? Why is Wales not taking advantage of this multi billion pound funding opportunity?

One of the key issues recognised by the Committee is that collaboration between industry and academia appears relatively weakly developed in Wales. In particular, the so called “triple helix” model – where government, academia and industry work closely together - and which is strongly advocated within programmes, is found to be a very rare occurrence within the Welsh economy.

Another suggestion as to why Wales is punching well below its weight could be, paradoxically, the access to European Structural Funding and the report points out that there has been a tendency to concentrate on Structural Funds as opposed to transnational EU programmes. For example, Swansea University has only received £4.1 million from FP7 as compared to £55 million from Convergence funding.

So what were the key recommendations from the committee as to how Wales can help can take full advantage of this funding to help develop the economy?

The most relevant, and obvious, suggestion is that there needs to be a far more strategic approach to how Wales can access all programmes funded by the European Union. Clearly, the Welsh Assembly Government can influence this process but so can the six new industry panels formed under the Economic Renewal programme, all of which have the clout to focus on the multi-billion pound programmes that directly affect their sectors.

In addition, the committee suggested that there seemed to very little information on EU funding opportunities available to potential bidders and, more relevantly, very little support to help applicants through the labyrinth of documents that make up the administration of many EU programmes.

Certainly, I believe that given the European programme expertise that already exists within many higher education institutions in Wales, this role could be taken on by the universities that could be far more proactive in helping local businesses to access these programmes.

However, the most important issue for anyone involved in any EU programmes is the issue of partnership, as most programmes have to have participants from at least two EU countries.
This is where the Welsh Assembly Government could also play a role, by identifying similar regions across Europe and developing formal partnerships that, together, could bid for the billions of pounds of European support.

After all, if Wales doesn’t get it act together to bid for this multi billion pound pot of money in the future, other parts of Europe certainly will.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

THE CRACHACH

Unlike me, do you consider yourself part of 'the establishment' here in Wales?  As thousands gather for the Eisteddfod in Mold this morning, they will, according to some social commentators, not be participating in the greatest cultural festivals of Europe. Instead, they will merely be bit-part players in one of the annual gatherings of the great and good of Wales.  Unkindly, this set of the movers and shakers in Welsh society is known as 'the crachach' , and constitute a social class all of their own, dominating the educational, cultural and media sectors of Wales and allegedly looking down upon any outsider with new ideas, reinforcing mediocrity and failing to see beyond the limits of their own narrow experience.  They are said to live in a comfort zone that awaits the expected invitation to the next glass of chilled chardonnay and canapĂ©s, forgetting that due to their lack of leadership and drive, Wales remains firmly rooted to the bottom of the UK prosperity league ...

THE IMPORTANCE OF THE CREATIVE CLASSES

One of my favourite academic books of the last two decades must be the “Rise of the Creative Classes” by Professor Richard Florida.  This was one of the first detailed studies of the growing group of individuals who use their creativity and mental labour to earn a living and not only included those in arts and entertainment, but also people working in science and technology as well as knowledge-based professions such as healthcare, law, business, and finance.  Fast forward to 2022 and Professor Florida has written an updated report on the creative classes although he and his team now identify a different type of individual who is taking full advantage of the growth in digital platforms, social media, and online marketplaces.  Such ‘creators’ are defined as those who use digital technology to make and publish unique creative content, whether in the form of video, film, art, music, design, text, games, or any other media that audiences can access and respond to.  They ...

GLOBAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP MONITOR WALES 2022

How entrepreneurial is Wales? That is the question that the latest Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) attempts to answer in its latest report which investigates those involved in early-stage entrepreneurship i.e. starting and managing a new business.  This year’s results show that the rate of total early-stage entrepreneurship (TEA) in Wales in 2021 was 10.3% as compared to 11.5% for the UK. This is significantly higher than the previous year (6.5%) and means that around 192,000 adults aged between 18 and 64 are involved in entrepreneurial activity in Wales.  Nearly three quarters are in the very early stages of starting a business and the rest involved in managing a new business aged between 4 and 42 months old.  This is an important finding as not only is the overall rate of entrepreneurial activity in Wales increasing but this is largely accounted for by those starting a business. In this respect, it is critical that the right support mechanisms are in place to ensu...