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1 st meeting of the working group constructing indicators of progress/well-being with citizens/communities Monica Brezzi OECD Public Governance and Territorial.

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Presentation on theme: "1 st meeting of the working group constructing indicators of progress/well-being with citizens/communities Monica Brezzi OECD Public Governance and Territorial."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 st meeting of the working group constructing indicators of progress/well-being with citizens/communities Monica Brezzi OECD Public Governance and Territorial Policies Paris 24-25, July 2008

2 Regional development policies 1.Multidimensional concept of regional well-being as a key factor to support regional opportunities 2.In addressing inequalities, use of both relative measures and absolute measures (minimum agreed standard) 3.Multilevel governance approach, emphasis is given to vertical and horizontal coordination, accountability, local capacity building RDP aim to improve competitiveness and to expand people’s opportunities through a better use of territorial resources

3 1. Multidimensional concept of well-being Source: “OECD Regions at a glance 2007” Tertiary education attainmentAge-adjusted mortality rate

4 Information for regional development policies/1 The OECD Regional Database (RDB) includes 40 statistical indicators for 30 OECD member countries of demography, regional economic accounts, labour market, health, education, environment, safety, regional innovation Yearly updated (values since 1995 with a 3 year delay) and available on http://dotstat/wbos/http://dotstat/wbos/ Topics, statistics and methods are discussed within the Working Party on Territorial Indicators of the OECD Territorial Development Policy Committee. Statistics come from NSO or other official institutions

5 Information for regional development policies/2 (Regional grids) Regions in each member country are classified at two territorial levels (TLs): Territorial Level 2 (335 macro regions – US States) and territorial Level 3 (1679 micro regions – France Department). (Regional typology) Regions at the TL3 level are classified into Predominantly Urban, Intermediate or Predominantly Rural according to the share of population living in rural communities. Further refinement of typology in 2007 (on the size of urban centres contained in the TL3 region). (Metropolitan database) Definition of metropolitan regions (based on population, population density, commuting rate); applied for policy analysis

6 Elderly dependency rate: North America and rural/urban regions (2005)

7 2. Addressing inequalities with relative and absolute measures Share of national GDP generated by the 10% richest regions Gini index of inequalities and people affected

8 Further Steps (synergies with the community indicator project)/1 1.How to influence the Statistical Institutes to make a better use of the information of interest for local community and policy making Examples: Atlas of the index of multiple deprivation (UK National Statistics) 2.The poor availability of data on some dimensions of well- being and social inclusion at disaggregated territorial level (from official statistics) can make the “only gdp counts” approach regains ground. 3.Use of administrative data as “context information” in the community indicator cycle (starting point 1.Multidimensional concept of well-being

9 Further Steps (synergies with the community indicator project)/2 1.Explain more clearly the link between individual well-being and influence of the context (place/territory); 2.Inequalities in access to public services are directly linked with region-specific characteristics. Poor access to public services in certain regions undermines the opportunities available to the inhabitants of these regions, and in turn aggravates income inequalities over time. Example: Supply of relevant services (child and elderly care, education, health, quality of the environment etc.) but also their accessibility and quality. Different needs also according to geography. 3.The definition of ‘ essential standards” (absolute thresholds) must be done through an inclusive process taking into account people expectations. Therefore standards change over time 2.Measuring inequalities

10 Further Steps (synergies with the community indicator project)/3 More emphasis on the participatory/collaborative nature of the policy process; make citizens engagement part of the everyday business of government Why through the use of indicators and measures? 1.Conveying information spread among individuals, institutions, agency etc. 2.While doing it, consensus is built on the necessary changes (and how to get there); 3.Ensure that marginal/ more vulnerable groups are also represented 3.Multilevel governance approach


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