GRANADA WORKSHOP REPORT 3.
INRA, Toulouse
I will devote most of this report to describe the main features of rural development in the recent period and to underline the factors which have played a decisive role in these changes. That will lead me to stress that the future of rural areas depends as much on macro-economics policies and forces as on specific rural policies. Finally, I will briefly examine what can be considered as « rural development initiatives » and what could be the implications of the Cork declaration on these "initiatives".
Rural development in the recent period
Roughly, rural areas can be defined as characterised by a relatively low
density of population (the criteria adopted by the OECD is less than 150
inhabitants by square kilometres), and by the predominant of the vegetation
cover in the landscape whether it be cultivated or not. Rural areas are very
diverse depending on their proximity to urban centres, their endowment in
natural resources, their social fabric, their cultural heritage. Rural
development can be defined as the process which brings about changes in
population and employment in rural areas.
Changes in population
The more dramatic change that rural areas have witnessed over the last
twenty years or so has been a turnaround in internal migration patterns with
the long-standing rural exodus being replaced by what has been sometimes called
an "urban exodus". Of course, in every country this process has
unfolded in a very uneven way, with some areas undergoing an impressive growth
of population while in others out-migration flows have continued to outnumber
inward migration. That increasing migration of people from urban centres to
rural areas results from at least three distinct phenomena : periurbanization,
that is to say a dramatic rise in the number of commuters accompanied by an
enlargement of commuting catchments ; an increase in the number of retired
people settling down in the countryside ; an important flow of working class
return migrants, especially in many Mediterranean rural, generated by the sharp
reduction in unskilled blue-collar employment in old industrial centres of
North Western European countries (Germany and France).
Periurbanization is usually said as having been due to an increase in the
housing cost gap between urban agglomeration and less populated locations, a
worsening of urban pollution and a shift in values enhancing the preferences
for positive rural amenities with respect to urban ones, and last but not least
a fall in people transportation costs. People transportation costs cover two
aspects : spending of money and spending of time in travelling. The latter has
been reduced sharply by road infrastructure improvements, by the generalisation
of individual car ownership which was allowed by a widespread increase in
household incomes going together with a reduction in income inequalities (at
least until the late eighties), and also by a tendency to diminish the number
of working days and therefore the number of home to workplace journeys.
Immigration of retirees in the countryside was fuelled first by a rise in
their number in the society at large resulting from the lengthening of life
expectancy and, in many countries, also from the lowering of retirement age.
But that would not have been sufficient if it had not be accompanied by an
increase in their pensions allowing them to have a car without which retirement
in the countryside would entail loneliness and cutting links with family and
friend networks. The setting up of the welfare state has been a key factor of
the development of the migration of those categories towards rural areas.
That increase in urban to rural migrations was accompanied by a parallel
decline in the opposite flow mainly due to demographic factors. Traditionally
the rural exodus was basically fed by small farmers and their families, but
this pool is gradually drying up. Nowadays, out-migration from the countryside
results for its main part from the difficulties faced by young people to enter
the local labour market especially by those with a higher education who are
very unlikely to find nearby a job matching up to their expectations.
Changes in employment
The main changes can be summarised in six points.
First, the reversal in migration trends has had a strong impact on the
development of some activities in rural areas. The changes in the composition
of the rural population (and its growth in some places), with often an
increasing proportion of middle-class people and of retirees, have generated
new needs and new jobs especially in the personal and household services sector
(in particular in the health sector) in rural areas.
Second, rural areas are perfectly suited, because of the low land rent, to
space consuming activities. Agriculture and forestry, of course, but also
tourism. The rise in the average income linked with the high income elasticity
of recreational goods and services, the congestion of more traditional
destination (littoral areas, for instance), the increasing tendency towards
splitting off holidays time between different periods of the year, have been
key factors accounting for the growing demand for green tourism and the
development of the related activities.
Third, as the number of employees and therefore the added value produced by
unit of surface is higher in the service sector than in manufacturing
industries, the rise of the employment in the former has made land competition
fiercer in agglomeration centres and has contributed to drive the manufacturing
industries away from them. The extent of this manufacturing dispersal
throughout the countryside seems to vary with the countries. For instance, in
Ireland the highest rate of new firm formation in manufacturing sectors was
found in the most rural and least industrialised areas. In France, this
dispersal seems to have mainly affected periurban rural areas. In Italy it is
rather a shift in regional localisation.
Fourth, as large companies have been seeking to obtain a greater
flexibility, they have tended to reduce their own staff and to develop
sub-contracting usually with small firms. With lowering transportation costs
and the rapid development of new information and communication technologies,
subcontractors do not necessarily need to be located within the immediate
neighbourhood of their principal. However, the fall-out of the development of
advanced information and communication technologies on rural economies remain
to be assessed.
Fifth, with the globalization, European rural areas have lost the
comparative advantage they had over urban centres as regards unskilled labour
costs, and have suffered from the delocalization of some labour intensive
manufacturing activities towards developing countries.
Finally, farm employment keeps on shrinking as labour productivity grows
faster than the demand addressed to the agricultural sector.
Rural initiatives and the implications of the « Cork
declaration ».
Rural initiatives can be understood as actions undertaken with the view of
bringing about changes in rural areas. They can come from local or external
actors. With that definition individual and not co-ordinated decisions or
policy measures aiming not explicitly at modifying the situation of rural areas
cannot be considered as rural initiatives. The factors having played a decisive
role in the transformation of rural areas during the recent periods do not
result from rural initiatives, but from macro-economic changes (globalization,
work-time organisation, worsening of urban pollution), from macro-policy
measures (the setting up of the welfare state, public spending on road
infrastructures), from demographic tendencies (lengthening of life expectancy),
and from individual decisions to adapt to these changes.
Does that means that rural initiatives does not matter? Of course not. But
their impact depends crucially on the evolution of the key factors listed
above. What makes the difference between rural areas placed under similar
conditions of localisation is, first of all, their ability to attract new
people. The Cork Declaration expresses a willingness to shift from a pure
agricultural policy to a rural policy of which two main characteristics would
be to help maintain a pleasant and attractive environment through adequate aids
to farmers, and to adopt a bottom-up approach supporting local (or more
precisely regional) initiatives. One can only agree with such general
orientations. However, it must be stressed that if in some areas the main
function of farming is to maintain the environment, then this can be achieved
with few people engaged in agriculture : extensive farming is probably the more
efficient and less costly way to realise this objective. Second, most the
Community funds are to be directed to actions resulting from local initiatives,
what will be then the future of the truly less favoured areas : those where
local initiatives are scarce?