The challenges of metropolitan regions and their position in the future cohesion policy post 2020
Opinion factsheet
On this page
- Cohesion Policy
- Urban policy
Objective
The main objectives of the opinion are:
To bring better visibility and recognition of the challenges faced by metropolitan regions and their contribution to achieving the goals of cohesion policy;
To highlight the importance of the metropolitan regions within the preparation, design, implementation and monitoring of the Cohesion Policy after 2020;
Impact
An EPRS briefing and an external study commissioned by the CoR to OIR supported the preparation of this opinion. The study was published by the EU Office of publications and the European documentation center of the university of Almeria.
As a follow up to the adoption of the opinion in plenary on 4/5 December 2019, a COTER external seminar in Bratislava was planned in May 2020 on The challenges and position of metropolitan regions in the cohesion policy (with the participation of members of the European parliament's REGI committee). Unfortunately, it had to be postponed twice due to the COVID crisis.
Mr Droba participated as a CoR speaker at the annual meeting of the EMA (European Metropolitan Authorities) in Porto , 11/12 November 2021
Essential points
- notes that although metropolitan regions (MRs) are seen as engines of Member States' economies as well as hubs of research and innovation, they have to address economic, fiscal and territorial challenges, while at the same time grappling with an expanding demand for quality public services and limited financial resources. This has a marked effect on the population's overall quality of life. Budget revenues in some MRs bear only the slightest relation to their economic success and high GDP;
- points out that, MRs have greater challenges to face linked to the quality of the environment and adaptation to climate change, urban poverty and social inclusion, youth unemployment, integration of migrants and criminality. The housing crisis impacts MRs and particular attention needs to be paid to MRs undergoing economic transition;
- points out that MRs often also include rural areas. It is very important to work on well-functioning urban-rural connections within MRs and to avoid uncoordinated policy making;
- underscores the importance to acknowledge the added value of metropolitan collaboration in achieving common objectives in reducing regional disparities. By concentrating resources and expertise, MRs can help distributing wealth and benefits in a given area and forging more efficient urban-rural links;
- highlights the role of metropolitan regions in cohesion policy. Calls for MRs to be directly involved in the framing of cohesion policy and the implementation and evaluation of operational programmes and EU projects;
- points out that because of their relative wealth, MRs are constrained in drawing cohesion policy fund; supports the European Commission's proposal to increase the option of a financial transfer between categories of regions from 3% to 15% of a Member State's total allocation. The GDP per capita does not give the full picture about the level of development; recommends using the Social Progress Index (SPI) methodology to identify the most pressing challenges in MRs that need to be financed by cohesion policy funds.