Title: Disintegration, the reason for policy failure
1Disintegration, the reason for policy failure
an analytical model of integrated rural
development By Gusztáv Nemes (Hungarian
Academy of Sciences Institute of Economics)
Chris High (Open University Systems
Department)
- Introduction
- Rural disadvantages - access and resources
- Two rural development systems central
administrative and local heuristic - Integrated versus non-integrated rural
development two simple models
2- 40 years of EU and domestic policies, positive
discrimination - Everyday aspiration of local people to make rural
life better - RESULTS
- Environmental and social degradation,
depopulation, growing geographical disparities,
etc. - WHY RURAL POLICIES DO NOT WORK WELL?
- HOW COULD WE DO BETTER?
3RURAL DISADVANTAGES ACCESS AND RESOURCES
- Rural areas have comparative disadvantages
- access-type disadvantages
- Results of underdevelopment of different
infrastructures, resulting in limited
communication of people, goods, capital and
information from and to backward rural areas - physical economic and political (or policy)
access. - resource-type disadvantages
- Results in the limited ability to produce goods
and services, saleable on the global market - financial, human, and institutional resources
- Core policies usually promote access type
disadvantages - Access two-way concept, without improved local
resource base can cause damage
4TWO RURAL DEVELOPMENT SYSTEMS
- Europeanisation improving access, diminishing
traditional protections, exposing rural areas to
global (unequal) competition. - Rural development is
- external (central) intervention - to protect
the loss of rural values during Europeanisation
through rules, financial aid, rural policies in
general - aspiration of local people - to improve their
own lives through unlocking local resources and
attracting external ones, searching for new
futures
5TWO RURAL DEVELOPMENT SYSTEMS
- 1. Central-administrative system of rural
development - Based on top-down intervention of the political
centre - Comprises of EU and domestic policies, centrally
redistributed resources, strategic development
plans, bureaucratic knowledge, central rules,
high level interest groups, NGOs, etc. - Institutionalised character (with written
procedures) - External resources for intervention
- Narrow information
- Aimed at quantifiable results
- Can have high level, longer term objectives
- Central development logic (modernist paradigm)
- Main aim is to provide access and a peaceful
environment for economic development for the
economic centre - Level EU-domestic-regional (?)
6TWO RURAL DEVELOPMENT SYSTEMS
- 2. Local-heuristic system
- Based on endogenous bottom-up processes
- Comprises of local actors and values local
development plans social networks and kinship
relations local authorities, innovative
individuals, development associations and
partnerships, etc. - Low level of institutionalisation
- Builds on local resources, but often needs
external help - Based on responsive local knowledge and wide
information flows - Main aim is to improve local life, giving
flexible responses to external challenges,
keeping benefits for the locality - Local development logic (new development
paradigm) - Level sub-regional and bellow
7Human actors
- Local heuristic system
- Local leaders, entrepreneurs, etc.
- Their work effects their lives they risk their
own money - Embeddedness moral control
- Insightful knowledge on local matters, but often
little understanding of central rules - Very committed and less objective
- Main concern is the betterment of rural life /
non-quantifiable results - Central-administrative system
- Politicians, high level public servants, etc.
- Deal with others life, do not risk their own
money - High up in the system broad vision, objectivity
- Under bureaucratic and political control
- Insightful knowledge of bureaucratic rules but
low information on local - Main concern is to comply with the political
centre, accountability, transparency - Risk evasion
8Integrated versus non-integrated rural
development two simple models
- Central Administrative System of Rural
Development characterised by top-down,
exogenous interventions, high level of
institutionalisation, bureaucratic control,
written rules and procedures, the modernist
technological regime and quantifiable targets - Central Development Resources financial
resources in the central development budget,
available for redistribution through the central
system - Local Heuristic System of Rural Development
characterised by bottom-up processes, heuristic
aspiration of local people to improve their
lives, flexible responses to challenges, social
networks, diversity, multifunctionality, and
synergistic effects - Local Development Resources rural values
(natural, cultural, social), understood as
resources, which often have to be unlocked or
reconfigured if they are to be used for local
economic development - Access-type Disadvantages limiting access
(physical, economic, policy) and the free
movement of goods, people and capital to and from
backward areas - Resource-type Disadvantages (financial, human,
institutional) limiting the ability of rural
areas to produce goods and services saleable on
the global market - Result the outcome of the development process
to a certain extent upgraded access and enhanced
production capacity, resulting in either more
balanced or biased environment for local economy
and society.
9The non-integrated system of rural development
10The integrated system of rural development
11Information flows in the non-integrated
development system
12Information flows in the integrated development
system
13Thank You for your attention!