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A memo sent to correspondents, friends and
acquaintances of the Budapest
Observatory (BO) in August 2007
BO worked on festivals, identities, books
and translation in August, but reviewing other reports has overwhelmed this
memo.
The competitiveness race
Some time ago
BO was amazed
by the European Urban Audit, a
huge survey covering 258 cities, which was re-analysed now by Ecotec and
published in the State of European
Cities Report.
Wishing to add value to the the original
survey, says the subtitle.
One of the aims
was to identify the factors that explain competitiveness, the greatest virtue
of any European city since the strategic goals were set in Lisbon in 2000. The authors created a "Lisbon benchmark" of
their own from seven indicators ranging from GDP per inhabitant of the city to
youth unemployment.
They found that
many of Europe's high performers at economic competitiveness are located in the
north and the centre of the Union. As to the
east, Estonia ranks highly,
while several capitals such as Prague and Budapest also perform
well. The weakest cities on the Lisbon benchmark
can be found in Poland, Romania, and Bulgaria.
The competitiveness types
The
258 cities were grouped into the following 13 types:
International Hubs
- Knowledge hubs
- Established capitals
- Re-invented capitals
Specialised Poles
- National
service hubs
- Transformation
poles
- Gateways
- Modern
industrial centres
- Research
centres
- Visitor
centres
Regional Poles
- De-industrialised
cities
- Regional
market centres
- Regional
public service centres
- Satellite towns
The list gives little clue as to where you
encounter culture at the greatest extent. At the transformation poles:
"Examples include the renovation of the former Fiat plant in Turin into an
impressive design and exhibition space, the city centre upgrade of Glasgow
including turning the river banks into a ‘hip' artistic zone and the new
Bullring shopping centre in Birmingham which is attracting many visitors from
far afield. Manchester is emerging as a
well-connected and fashionable city in the UK,
well-positioned to be a viable alternative to London in areas of services, culture and
arts."
Besides these western metropolis, the 33
transformation poles include the following eastern cities: Kaunas,
Maribor, Pleven, Plzen, Rzeszów and Targu
Mures.
Happy cities
The
previous report is based on hard statistics. Eurobarometer, on the other hand,
measures opinions and feelings. This time they surveyed
perceptions of quality of life in 75 European cities.
Believe or not, 91% of the people they met
were satisfied to live in their city. Even more startling is that only 60% said
that it will be more pleasant to live in that city in the next five years. How
to explain the first high, and the next sharp decline?
East or west makes little difference about
actual happiness. On the other hand, people in eastern cities appeared hugely
more optimistic about the five year prospects than in the west: 70% against
60%.
The happiest cities on the two counts were
Leipzig 98-78 and Newcastle 97-75 in the west, and Piatra Neamţ 97- 86 and
Burgas 96-81 in the east. (Which means: 96% feel alright living in Burgas, and
81% hopes the same for 2012.)
Sad Budapest
was way below the average on both counts 86-58, Warsaw 89-61 just a little better - but even
in these two capital cities positive answers were above 50%.
Cultural
cities
Besides overall satisfaction,
Eurobarometer asked about specific contentment with cultural facilities, such
as concert halls, theatres, museums and libraries. This question produced the
reverse to the one about the future: no eastern city was voted into the top 20
by its inhabitants: the 45% of Burgas meant the very bottom of the list of 75
cities.
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Top
20
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Eastern Europe
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Helsinki
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95%
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Hamburg
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90%
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Tallinn
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85%
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Warsaw
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76%
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Munich
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94%
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Groningen
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90%
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Prague
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83%
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Riga
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75%
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Copenhagen
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94%
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Graz
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90%
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Ljubljana
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81%
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Kosice
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72%
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Leipzig
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93%
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Stockholm
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89%
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Miskolc
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80%
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Cluj-Napoca
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71%
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Oulu
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93%
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Paris
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89%
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Zagreb
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79%
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Bratislava
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69%
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Vienna
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93%
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Berlin
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89%
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Budapest
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78%
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Piatra Neamţ
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69%
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Glasgow
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92%
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Rotterdam
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88%
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Gdańsk
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77%
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Bucharest
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62%
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Newcastle
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91%
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Dortmund
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87%
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Vilnius
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77%
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Białystok
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57%
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Amsterdam
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91%
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Aalborg
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87%
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Kraków
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77%
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Sofia
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46%
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Cardiff
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91%
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Dublin
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86%
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Ostrava
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76%
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Burgas
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45%
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Two further questions relate to culture:
satisfaction with cinema as well as access to public internet. The inhabitants
of Copenhagen, Oulu
and Cardiff declared high satisfaction about all
three (cultural facilities, cinema and internet); in the east only Ljubljana and Kraków were
above the average of 75 cities in all three factors. Residents in Burgas feel
miserable about all three services (remember happy Burgas?); Athens and Marseille also remained below the
average in these areas.
Culture
and urban development
One common
feature of these surveys was the low prominence given to culture. It was not
mentioned in the general presentation
of the Eurobarometer survey, BO had to dig for culture in the annex.
We were lately
lulled by academic and political statements that emphasised the role of culture
in urban and regional development ("creative city"). This made BO unprepared
for the almost total absence of culture from the Ecotec study (although this
organisation is familiar
with our sector). They managed to describe knowledge hubs or visitor centres without quoting cultural aspects of these types of cities. The
original sin must have been committed by the Urban Audit team, who put very
little of culture into the 333 variables applied to the 2004-2005 survey on 258
cities.
What to do? Grab the following opportunity!
Culture
and competitiveness
The team that promises to best prove that
creativity is the driving force of economic growth, might earn over € 300 000.
The call for this study tender
is favourably biased, quoting the American economist who notoriously links
creativity to certain cultural phenomena.
Neighbours
Eurobarometer created an editorial traffic
jam for BO memo by also releasing findings
on neighbourhood policy in August. Early this summer 54% of EU citizens were
not interested in what is happening in countries neighbouring the Union. Strangely (symptomatically?) the five most
indifferent member countries are in the east, only in Bulgaria do
people show slightly higher commitment than the EU average. The greatest
interest was manifested in Cyprus
and Greece.
30% of EU citizens judge that our
neighbours share most of the values of the Union.
All ten eastern countries produced higher than average figures, led by Lithuania and Latvia with 53-52%. However, only
15 and 16% of people in Malta
and Luxembourg
believe in common values with EU neighbours.
Dragan's book
Mobility of Imagination by Dragan Klaic is available.
BO can assist you in bulk purchase for courses, conferences, and the like.
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