1887

Regions in Industrial Transition 2023

New Approaches to Persistent Problems

image of Regions in Industrial Transition 2023

This report builds on work presented in the OECD’s 2019 report Regions in Industrial Transition: Policies for People and Places. It considers industrial transition as a complex and enduring challenge in regional development that traditional policy levers have not always been able to satisfactorily address. Beginning with an overview of how to characterise these regions, it then explores why they require tailored policy approaches and posits whether adopting a more experimental path in governance arrangements and policy initiatives could make inroads in meeting industrial transition objectives.

The report shares findings emanating from the experiences of eight regions and two countries that designed and implemented experimental initiatives to advance their industrial transition process and Smart Specialisation Strategies, with the support of the European Commission. It features a framework of governance and policy areas that influence industrial transition, and applicable to experimentation. Combining this with insights from each experiment studied, the report presents a toolkit of policy levers for policy makers grappling with industrial transition, and a checklist for those wishing to apply an experimental approach to industrial transition initiatives. Finally, the report contains a synopsis of the initiatives designed and implemented by the regions and countries participating in this project.

English

Executive Summary

Among OECD member countries, per capita income gaps have declined over the past 20 years, however, gaps between the wealthiest and poorest regions (TL3) within many countries have grown. In 2022, 70% of the OECD population lived in countries where regional income inequality was growing. This is of particular relevance for residents of regions in industrial transition, which tend to have lower GDP per capita than national averages, experience low GDP growth and have lower productivity levels.

English Also available in: French

This is a required field
Please enter a valid email address
Approval was a Success
Invalid data
An Error Occurred
Approval was partially successful, following selected items could not be processed due to error