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Conference on Shaping the Future of the European Social Fund ESF and Europe 2020 Brussels, 23-24 June, 2010 Michael Wiseman The George Washington University
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Translates the European Employment Strategy (EES) into grants-in-aid for Member State (MS) projects consistent with EU priorities for employment and social inclusion Funding priorities reflect this emphasis on economic mobility and human capital development Beyond priorities, ESF projects are targeted at particular classes of people believed most vulnerable to unemployment and social exclusion Some emphasis on development of institutional capacity 2
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€75 billion over 7 years is not “chicken feed,” but it is small compared to total MS spending on workforce programs Object must be modest redistribution and promotion of certain types of activities that yield external benefits Benefits include reinforcement of shared commitment to certain social and economic objectives Learning is frequently cited as a benefit 3
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How do we get more of what we want for the money that we have? 4
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In looking for pertinent experience, I take my cue from three ESF features: (1) the employment/human capital orientation (2) the strategic rather than comprehensive character of funding, and (3) the targeting of specific groups In the United States, activities funded under the Workforce Investment Act (WIA) have these features 5
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Created new, more integrated training and employment assistance system Co-located wide range of federal government services in ~ 3,000 “one-stops” Core is traditional Employment Service Separate funding streams for adult, dislocated worker, and youth Differentiates between core, intensive, and training services 6
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WIA is wholly federally funded ◦ Funding is by category, allocated across states by formula ◦ Accountability promoted with 17 performance measures ◦ Heavily reliant on common unemployment insurance system measures ◦ To receive each year’s formula allocation, states submit a plan and negotiate performance targets with regional Department of Labor office 7
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WIA spends about $4.2 billion per year for a total population of 310 million The ESF spends about €10 billion a year— $12.4 billion (sorry)—for a total population of 500 million Last year’s economic stimulus added another $3 billion to WIA 8
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Employment Target groups Focus on outcomes and institutional development Both involve a fiscal and a guiding relationship between a central government and diverse member states 9
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ESF has much broader scope ESF provides grants for activities that the member states wouldn’t otherwise undertake; these efforts come in addition to the core state-funded employment services WIA funds the entire service; it is the states’ responsibility to administer the program Boundaries of WIA activities are better defined than diverse ESF projects Subsidiarity less of an issue with WIA Proportionality issues also of less relevance; every state program is subject to the same auditing standards 10
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It is one thing to spend money in ways that satisfy the auditors. It is another to spend funds efficiently and productively WIA attempts to encourage productivity with a “High Performance Bonus,” an increment in funding earned through achievement This may offer insights and ideas for ESF planning 11
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Fixed pool of money distributed across states averaging better than 100 percent for target achievement and meeting minimum standards on all targets Total amount approximately $10 million States earn from $750 thousand- $3 million; NO variation by size States have great flexibility in funds use Political involvement varies Funding and Department of Labor interest have declined 12
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Amount of funding Target determination procedure Counterproductive strategic behavior Lag between achievement and reward No performance feedback 13
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The bilateral state-federal relationship Prescription: An Open Method? Scenarios for ESF funding post-2013 sound WIA-like in establishing targets and linking funding to target achievement Doing this will be more complicated than WIA It may be productive to offset regulatory burden with second, “bonus” tier of more flexible funding 14
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Small step: Creation of small investment funds to “support and test promising approaches to training, breaking down program silos, building evidence about effective practices, and investing in what works.” BIG step: Trialing of regression-adjustment of state and local workforce board performance targets for economic and demographic variation Full roll-out anticipated for 2011, after 7-state pilots. This development in target-setting deserves ESF attention 15
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