Preparing for a better urban-rural balance in EU funding
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By Jorge Núñez Ferrer / Tamás Kiss-Gálfalvi / Doina Postica / Izabela Marcinkowska / Karolina Zubel
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Rapid
urbanisation in several EU Member States and the ensuing population
shift from rural areas towards urban centres are generally treated in
economic literature as a necessity for generating growth and wellbeing.
In the last two decades, however, the overly positive assessment of this
trend has shifted.
Globalisation has put increasing pressure on agriculture, food
processing industries and other local cottage and SME enterprises. This
has led to accelerating changes in the balance between rural and urban
areas and has deeply impacted the overall socio-economic fabric of
regions.
At the same time, declining rural populations make many rural
communities unsustainable. Once inhabitants decide to leave areas due to
falling living standards, the remaining population suffers from the
further deprivation of goods and services, driving even more people to
leave. Several studies have been assessing the costs associated with
these changes, in particular their impact on the viability of rural
communities. However, they generally fall short of the holistic
assessment required, as the decline and shift of populations also create
further negative spillovers on the rest of the economy, for example on
urban areas that are usually at the receiving end of the influx of rural
populations.
This report aims to contribute to the debate on EU rural development
policy by presenting a methodology to understand the net costs and
benefits of investing in rural areas to society as a whole. By doing so,
it asks whether rural depopulation is just a rural problem or whether
the consequences have a bearing on the whole of society, and in
particular urban areas.(...)
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