Committee
Enterprise and Culture Committee, 13 Mar 2007
13 Mar 2007 · S2 · Enterprise and Culture Committee
Item of business
European Structural Funds
Professor Bachtler:
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I do not know whether it will be the last word, but I will try to respond briefly to a couple of the points that have been raised.On complexity, Christine May and others will recall the agenda 2000 document of 1997 and the heading on the simplification of structural funds. There was a big push on that in 2001, but programme managers who will be responsible for the next period do not talk about simplification. The EU regulations are quite small—only about 30 pages long—but European strategic objectives are associated with these issues and the translation of those objectives into practice inevitably brings with it a whole series of requirements.Over time, more and more concern has been expressed at European level about spending money on European policies, which has led to increasing attention being paid to monitoring, evaluation, financial control and audit. Much of the bureaucracy comes from the monitoring and financial control. There is a clash between the desire for something simple and the criticisms of the way in which European money is being spent. I am not hopeful that things will be less complex in future.However, I am more hopeful about the retention of good practice. Structural funds have been in Scotland as programmes since 1986 and as projects since 1975. Looking at what happened during the 1990s, one sees that a fair amount of what one could call the good practice associated with structural funds became part of the domestic policy agenda. Partnership in Scotland pre-dated structural funds, but it was given a powerful push by structural funds. Ditto community development, equal opportunities and the whole integration agenda, to which much importance has been accorded.A fair amount of added value from structural funds has become embedded, so the question is, where do we go from here? Can structural funds continue to play an innovative role in future?
In the same item of business
The Convener:
SNP
For agenda item 2, I welcome Dr Sara Davies, senior research fellow, and Professor John Bachtler, director, of the European policies research centre at the U...
Professor John Bachtler (University of Strathclyde):
Thank you and good afternoon. We are pleased to be here. We cannot quite compete with the glamour of the previous discussion on sport, but we will do our bes...
Dr Sara Davies (University of Strathclyde):
I will outline the research questions that the committee asked us to consider before talking briefly about the methodology and looking at an overview of the ...
Professor Bachtler:
We were asked to identify a few issues for the committee's consideration that might form part of its legacy paper, although they do not form part of the repo...
The Convener:
SNP
That was helpful, and thank you for the report. I invite comments and questions.
Christine May:
Lab
I am getting the blame for the research—I use the word "blame" advisedly. I am sorry if I am an anorak, but I found the report and presentation extremely int...
The Convener:
SNP
We are a wee bit tight for time, so it would be helpful if you could keep your answers reasonably tight.
Professor Bachtler:
Those are good questions. As was said, we have taken a different approach in Scotland. In part, that reflects the fact that the system in Scotland was create...
Dr Davies:
One interesting aspect of the new period, which runs from this year to 2013, is that EU rules are becoming more stringent on themes—on the categories of spen...
The Convener:
SNP
The Executive recently announced that the minimum size of projects will increase to achieve more bang for the buck in the next six years, but small local pro...
Professor Bachtler:
As Sara Davies said in her presentation, like other parts of the UK, Scotland has allocated structural funds to a much larger number and more diverse range o...
Christine May:
Lab
I was part of a local authority that had a clawback from the first round of funding towards the end of the second round. That happened because papers were mi...
Dr Davies:
One reason for the strong focus on community development and voluntary organisations in Scotland and elsewhere in the UK is that, in the early 1990s, no one ...
Susan Deacon:
Lab
I am conscious that Christine May was rather apologetic about raising the matter, so I stress that it is helpful that she did so. There are many issues that ...
The Convener:
SNP
I stress that we are taking the research seriously and that our findings will be passed to our successor committee and to the European and External Relations...
Christine May:
Lab
In addition, the repercussions of changes will be around for a while, not only in managing the changes but in picking up on issues afterwards.I worry that we...
The Convener:
SNP
Professor Bachtler, do you want the last word?
Professor Bachtler:
I do not know whether it will be the last word, but I will try to respond briefly to a couple of the points that have been raised.On complexity, Christine Ma...
The Convener:
SNP
Thank you—that was very helpful. I am sure that we will take these issues forward; as Christine May said, loads of issues will be around for the next six yea...
Meeting closed at 16:41.