Evaluation of Measures Targeting Social Inclusion (SROP Priority 5) Nóra Teller Hétfa Research Institute - Metropolitan Research Institute 30 April 2013.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Measuring social added value A model for public authorities
Advertisements

Evaluation of ESF Support for Roma integration Dominique Bé EURoma, 10 November 2011, Budapest.
The political framework
URBACT II Building Healthy Communities 1 st Steering Group Meeting Brussels, 9-10 June 2008 An overview.
Workshop 4: Using the EU Structural Funds to support Independent Living Ines Bulic European Network on Independent Living Strasbourg Freedom Drive, 9 Sept.
Dorotea Daniele, Facilitator. The members Polish Ministry of Regional Development ESF Council in Sweden Lombardy Region Ministry of Labour and Social.
What can we learn from the evaluation of social developments? András Csite Hétfa Research Institute 30 April 2013.
Cyprus Project Management Society
European Social Fund Evaluation in Italy Stefano Volpi Roma, 03 maggio 2011 Isfol Esf Evaluation Unit Human Resources Policies Evaluation Area Rome, Corso.
Improving the added value of EU Cohesion policy Professor John Bachtler European Policies Research Centre University of Strathclyde, Glasgow
The Lisbon strategy and the Hungarian employment strategy László Kordás 29 April 2006 Balatongyörök.
José Manuel Fresno EURoma meeting Budapest, 8 November 2011.
poor implementation New strategy 2010 – Knowledge, Competence, Tools Mobilizing and informing all relevant actors Positive results From 7 % to.
How the European Social Fund can contribute to social enterprises? Workshop 7: Structural funds (ESF, ERDF) for social enterprises Strasbourg, 16 January.
Employment Creation Employment creation has not been given priority by some countries in their macro economic policies and development plans. Policy Priorities.
Evaluation of NSRF measures on the development of public education Gábor Balás Hétfa Research Institute 30 April 2013.
1 The Sectoral Operational Programme for Human Resources Development Managing Authority for Sectoral Operational Programme for Human Resources Development.
The cohesion policy of the European Union Pelle Anita University of Szeged Faculty of Economics and Business Administration.
Riga – Latvia, 4 & 5 December 2006
Local authorities’ role in implementing European Employment Strategy - case Finland Mr. Lauri Lamminmäki, Senior Adviser Association of Finnish Local and.
Evaluation of Measures Targeting the Improvement of Employment Károly Mike Hétfa Research Institute 30 April 2013.
The Territorial Dimension in the legislative proposals for cohesion policy Zsolt SZOKOLAI Policy Analyst, Urban development and territorial cohesion.
EN Regional Policy EUROPEAN COMMISSION Innovation and the Structural Funds, Antwerp, 16 January 2007 Veronica Gaffey Innovative Actions Unit.
October  The Economic and Social Council (ESC) is “the civil parliament” of Bulgaria. It unites a variety of Bulgarian civil society organisations.
Towards a European network for digital preservation Ideas for a proposal Mariella Guercio, University of Urbino.
Evaluation of Programmes Targeting Higher Education Károly Mike Hétfa Research Institute 30 April 2013.
Espoo, ESPON project Identification of Spatially Relevant Aspects of the Information Society TPG.
Employment Research and innovation Climate change and energy Education Fighting poverty.
European Commission Introduction to the Community Programme for Employment and Social Solidarity PROGRESS
Introduction to PROGRESS Community programme for Employment and Social Solidarity Finn Ola Jølstad Norwegian Ministry of Labour and Social Inclusion.
EU Funding opportunities : Rights, Equality and Citizenship Programme Justice Programme Jose Ortega European Commission DG Justice.
The new EU cohesion policy ( ) EASPD Project Development Workshop May 10th – Sofia (BG) Jelle Reynaert – Policy Officer.
│ 1│ 1 What are we talking about?… Culture: Visual Arts, Performing Arts, Heritage Literature Cultural Industries: Film and Video, Television and radio,
Regional Policy EU Cohesion Policy 2014 – 2020 Proposals from the European Commission.
Employment and social inclusion Pacts in Romania (ESF supporting Governance structures) Partnership Community of Practice Malta, 17th January 2008 Danut.
The European agenda on improving the efficiency of employment and social policies: Bratislava, December 2011 The example of social experimentation.
ALPINE SPACE Margarita Jančič MOP - DEZI Kranj,
European policy perspectives on social experimentation Antoine SAINT-DENIS and Szilvia KALMAN, European Commission - DG Employment, social affairs and.
Regional & Urban Policy Investments for growth & jobs Promoting development and good governance in EU regions and cities 6 th Report on economic, social.
ESPON Seminar Luxembourg, 8-9 December Cohesion-and-Urban-Policy-_26-27-November-2015_-Luxembourg-City_/index.php.
Evaluation of equal opportunity measures in the Hungarian Operational Programmes Monitoring and evaluation of Roma projects and policies 30 November 2010,
REGIONAL POLICY EUROPEAN COMMISSION The contribution of EU Regional/Cohesion programmes Corinne Hermant-de Callataÿ European Commission,
"The challenge for Territorial Cohesion 2014 – 2020: delivering results for EU citizens" Veronica Gaffey Acting Director EUROPEAN COMMISSION, DG for Regional.
Networking on social inclusion The role of NGOs in tackling poverty and social exclusion: Aims and achievements of the European Anti Poverty Network Istanbul,
REPORT OF GRANADA CONFERENCE ON POLICIES TOWARDS ROMA, GYPSIES AND TRAVELLERS IN EUROPE, Spain, May 2003 REPORT OF GRANADA CONFERENCE ON POLICIES.
György Molnár Policy Recommendations Based on the experience of the Kiútprogram With support from the EU A Way Out – and a Possible Way Forward Social.
Erasmus+ programme for boosting skills and employability of young people Youth cooperation with Eastern Partnership (EaP) and Western Balkan countries.
Forecasting the labor market needs of workforce skills Budapest 26 February 2014.
URBACT IMPLEMENTATION NETWORKS. URBACT in a nutshell  European Territorial Cooperation programme (ETC) co- financed by ERDF  All 28 Member States as.
Małgorzata Lublińska Ministry of Regional Development in Poland.
EUROPEAN NEIGHBOURHOOD AND PARTNERSHIP INSTRUMENT - ENPI CROSS-BORDER COOPERATION PROGRAMMES.
European Commission 1 An EU Framework for National Roma Integration Strategies by 2020 An EU Framework for National Roma Integration Strategies by 2020.
Innovative Labour Market Measures to Fight the Crisis Prague, Czech Republic October 20 – 21, 2011.
Programme Competitiveness Operational Programme Education for Competitiveness.
Combating poverty in Europe People2People Programme Workshop: Child Poverty Mieke Schuurman 20 October 2009 DG Enlargement workshop Child Poverty.
Regional Policy Future of Cohesion Policy and Investments in Health Christopher Todd, Head of Unit, Slovakia European Commission, Directorate General for.
Open Days 2015 “Interreg Europe: how can Investment for Growth and Jobs programmes benefit? October 15 th, 2015 / Brussels Managing Authority testimony:
SOCIAL INCLUSION IN EASTERN EUROPE AND CENTRAL ASIA TOWARDS MAINSTREAMING AND RESULTS SOCIAL INCLUSION IN EASTERN EUROPE AND CENTRAL ASIA TOWARDS MAINSTREAMING.
The New Hungary Development Plan and Life Long Guidance
Operational Programme Education for Competitiveness
Lessons learned from the evaluation of the ESF
EMIN policy coordinator
ESF and IB New ESF priority which recognises the need to support the strengthening of institutional and administrative capacity in Convergence regions.
Gender Equality Ex post evaluation of the ESF ( )
PRIORITIES in the area of employment and social policy during the Bulgarian Presidency of the Council of the European Union 1 January – 30.
Overview of the New Skills Agenda for Europe
The Social Investment Package (SIP) -20 February 2013
European policy perspectives on social experimentation
Dorotea Daniele, Facilitator
Embedding Governance & Participation in the European Structural Funds
Presentation transcript:

Evaluation of Measures Targeting Social Inclusion (SROP Priority 5) Nóra Teller Hétfa Research Institute - Metropolitan Research Institute 30 April 2013

– Subject and aim of the evaluation – Main conclusions 1.Strategic relevance of SROP 5 2.Results of the interventions: – Results of the assessment of measures – Institutional issues 3.Examination of selected aspects of EQUAL and HRDOP measures – Methodology and networks – Individual level effects – Summary and recommendations Structure of the presentation

The subject of the evaluation: the SROP 5 and some previous measures 5.1 Developing the human capacities of the most disadvantaged territories 5.2 Investment in our future: child and youth programmes 5.3 Improvement in access of increasingly disadvantaged groups to social services, in order to promote their integration into the labour market 5.4 Development of the social care system, improvement in access to services 5.5 Development of local communities and the civil society 5.6 Enhancing social cohesion through crime prevention and reintegration programmes Apart from this: results of methods and partnerships which can be linked to selected EQUAL and HRDOP developments, effects on individual strategies

The aim of the evaluation: to formulate recommendations for the preparation of the programming period – Based on the assessment of strategic relevance – Based on the project-level analysis of SROP 5 measures – Based on the analysis of the framework for the next programming period – Based on previous measures for the improvement of employability Aim of the evaluation

The SROP 5 – basic data No. of applicationsGrants The resources in SROP Priority 5 were HUF 137 billion for the whole period, the grants awarded so far are 68% of this amount (as of October 3, 2012) Graphs: data for 7th March

The targeted indicator values are achievable. There are a few discrepancies between the realisation of the expected target values and the dimensions of social inclusion. The SROP 5 measures are only relevant to a smaller part of the NTFS goals. The SROP 5 reaches nearly people, so it can manage part of the problem, other OPs and policies are also necessary, e.g. for the handling of the social exclusion dimension and for the fulfillment of the EU 2020 goals. The harmony of the development strategies and the current policy goals can be broken, which is caused by the frequent changes in sectoral policies. Strategic relevance - summary

Results: Target groups – real, yet hardly quantifiable results Three large groups: – The relatively skilled, and only temporally unemployed – developments which result in additional social capital, marketable knowledge and, conclusively, new workplaces – The older generation – the programmes cannot make a significant change, yet they help to grab hold temporarily – Where there is absolutely no demand for the low skilled, the programmes can only strengthen parts of skills, yet these remain usually without tangible results because of the frequent failure of the continuation and interdependence of the measures

Results: Territorial targeting The developments have largely reached the least developed micro-regions Regarding the target groups the „skimming off” principle largely prevails The creation of competition often overwrites the demands based on the real needs The projects hardly reach the peripheries Share of children receiving regular child allowance and the locations of SROP és projects Winners Losers Share of those receiving the benefits, age group below 18 years, % Not disadvantaged, Temporarily disadvantaged, Disadvanategd Least advantaged Least advantaged with complex programme Nr. of implemented projects Nr. of applications

Results: importance of institutional capacities The ability to adapt is lager in case of those institutions who handle more funds simultaneously, and „expand” their capacities The institutions have learned to adapt to the funds and the expectations The implementation of complex projects often require skilled experts with very specific knowledge, who are hardly, or even not at all available locally The grant writers’ market’s project generating and implementing role requires further examination

Results: Innovations and methodological developments Organisational „innovations”: partnerships, representation of policy objectives, designing of innovations, support of members Methodological innovations: e.g. combination of social and employment services, re-inclusion of homeless people, drug prevention programmes The „quasi-key” projects of SROP 5 which have been giving methodological support, are important, however because of the lack of clarity of competencies they can/could only have a partial impact on local professional contents However: there is some success, e.g. „Child Chance”: complex service management on the peripheries, with expert support, follow up and monitoring

The employment services and service providing organisations went through significant improvement Certain programmes (e.g. EQUAL, SROP 1.4.3, 2.6.1) strongly supported exchange of experiences and standardisation On the basis of life-path interviews and reports of implementing organisations: – Parts of the target groups can only be directed to subsidised employment or public employment schemes – Due to limited inclusion capacity of public employment schemes, uncertain accessibilty, and special traits of the organisation this can only mean a solution for a few people, even on the short term – but there should be employment forms organised in ways similar to the market! Selected measures of EQUAL and HRDOP - methodology, networks, target group members

General conclusions (1) Since the design of the OP, the problems have become more serious as a result of the crisis These effects cannot be mitigated only by the tools of development policy; there is a need for harmonisation of public policies that foster mechanisms of social inclusion There is a large level of uncertainty because of policy reforms and the change of financial frameworks Due competition based allocation of funding, developments often cannot reach those territories, municipalities, and groups which are most affected by the social problem which should be handled

Developments targeting inclusion combating poverty were only partly successful – „skimming off” From the project perspective there should be a shift towards programme perspective There is a need for programmes with greater funding intensity, complex methodology, based on multiple actors and embeddedness, tailored to the local needs – beyond improvement of local capacities, improvement of access to quality basic and special services There are promising measures in the current SROP 5: the development of special services, development of complex micro- regional services, and methodological innovations – the precedents of these were also present partly in the EQUAL- HRDOP, where the capacities of the NGOs had been strengthened as well. General conclusions (2)

Our recommendations – „Skimming problem”: strengthening of targeting, problem- centered measures – Strengthening of institutional capacities, diversification, and the utilisation of funds along complex needs – Fine-tuning of thematic measures, revision of measuring results – Embedding of public services and developments, making them predictable – For the next programming period: recommendations for the planning of the OP – with hindsight to a more effective targeting of the tightened budget - are as follows: Within deep poverty: targeted support for combating child- poverty and the inclusion of the Roma Fund allocation based on territorial development Improving access to public services Employability and employment (with the new economic development and innovation OP) Capacity building of institutions (and municipalities)

Thank you for your attention! Hétfa Research Institute H-1051 Budapest Október 6. utca 19.