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123

Cross-border

economic

development

Project factsheets

Cross-border Euroregional strategies for economic development and innovation

In concrete terms, the Pyrenees-Mediterranean Euroregion EGTC will

help to establish contacts between players in order to encourage the

formation of partnerships and the set-up of projects. It will also work

continuously to enhance the regional players’ shared knowledge, as

well as focusing its efforts on the priority areas. To do this, the EGTC

will collaborate with the departments of the four regions and with the

regional innovation agencies.

In 2014, the Aquitaine-Euskadi Euroregion drew up a Strategic

Plan for 2014-2020

which identifies the development priorities for the

territory. This multi-thematic document also deals with the economy

and innovation.

A socio-economic assessment sets out the basis for the strategic

guidelines and gives an up-to-date overview of the territory in terms

of demography, jobs and training, economic activity, innovation and

technologies, transport, communication and tourism. In addition, a

review of the Aquitaine-Euskadi cooperation during the 2007-2013 period

has made it possible to establish the point of departure for the next

European programme period, which the Strategic Plan is designed for.

The strategic guidelines set out by this document focus on four areas:

Euroregional citizenship; the knowledge-based economy, innovation

and entrepreneurial competitiveness; sustainable territory; and open

governance.

In the area of the economy, the long-term objective is to “move

towards a knowledge-based economy and improve businesses’

competitiveness and openness to new markets, by stimulating

cooperation between them, as well as the education system

and all of the research and innovation centres that exist in the

Euroregion”.

To do this, the actions carried out as part of the 2014-2020 Strategic

Plan aim at improving mutual knowledge and communication between

the territory’s economic players and those from the world of research.

The strategy sets out 13 lines of action which will support educational

mobility, common qualifications and vocational training. It will also

encourage cross-border entrepreneurship and give impetus to synergies

(inter-clustering, Euroregional innovation strategy) that will enable

them to work together, develop new activities and gain access to new

markets. All of these efforts will be concentrated primarily on the priority

sectors identified by the two regions’ smart specialisation strategies, in

which the potential for synergies is more important, linked to policies

for jobs and mobility.

How have the strategies been

formulated?

A key element in the formulation of these two Euroregional

strategies was the search for complementarities between the

regional innovation strategies and S3S,

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as well as economic

development strategies and other regional programmes.

The formulation of the assessment for the Pyrenees-Mediterranean

Euroregion’s strategy was entrusted to a consultancy firm in 2013 under

the Midi-Pyrénées Region’s presidency of the Euroregion. A consultation

of the Regions/Autonomous Communities, regional innovation agencies,

competitiveness hubs and clusters made it possible to compare the four

regional innovation strategies, the means used to support the priority

sectors and the systems of governance put in place. This phase also

highlighted the existing cooperation initiatives in the Euroregion, as

well as potential future developments. The Euroregional strategy drawn

up on the basis of this assessment was then validated by the political

representatives of the four regions.

The comparison of the regional strategies made it possible to identify

priority sub-areas for each sector, chosen on the basis of technical

criteria (regional economic and research potential), financing criteria

(European, national and regional funding, etc.) and political criteria

(players’ willingness to cooperate).

The drawing-up of the Aquitaine-Euskadi Euroregion’s Strategic Plan

was steered by the EGTC (with help from the consultancy firm IKEI). A

major exercise of consultation of the main public- and private-sector

players in the two regions, as well as of existing cooperation structures

in the territory, was carried out.

Howwill the strategies be

implemented?

Both of the Euroregions identify the European programmes (regional

and cooperation programmes) as the first source of funding for

the implementation of their strategies.

In the Aquitaine-Euskadi Strategic Plan, for each line of action the most

relevant programmes and thematic objectives to support projects have

been specified. The Plan also stipulates that there should be annual

monitoring and evaluation of implementation in order to help prepare

for the post-2020 programme.

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Smart Specialisation Strategies

.