If the People Lead, the Leaders will Follow
Posted on | March 4, 2010 | No Comments
Sometimes it takes a while for the obvious to trickle its way upwards from the entrepreneurial trenches to the level of policy. But when it does, entire frameworks are laid out and both national and local strategies are developed to follow suit. This is where we seem to have arrived. For the entrepreneur / innovator it can be important to keep an eye on the policy landscape in which we operate. The Europe 2020 strategy sets out a challenging agenda for a proactive, regional response to the host of issues which have individually sent shock waves through our communities, and which together have shifted the landscape around us. About time; now bring on the “little people”, the entrepreneurs and creative corps.
After all, opportunity and challenge is our daily bread, innit?
EUROPE 2020, A strategy for smart, sustainable and inclusive growth.
(from the Executive Summary):
Europe faces a moment of transformation. The crisis has wiped out years of economic and social progress and exposed structural weaknesses in Europe’s economy. In the meantime, the world is moving fast and long-term challenges – globalisation, pressure on resources, ageing – intensify. The EU must now take charge of its future.
Europe can succeed if it acts collectively, as a Union. We need a strategy to help us come out stronger from the crisis and turn the EU into a smart, sustainable and inclusive economy delivering high levels of employment, productivity and social cohesion. Europe 2020 sets out a vision of Europe’s social market economy for the 21st century.
Europe 2020 puts forward three mutually reinforcing priorities:
– Smart growth: developing an economy based on knowledge and innovation.
– Sustainable growth: promoting a more resource efficient, greener and more competitive economy.
– Inclusive growth: fostering a high-employment economy delivering social and territorial cohesion.
The EU needs to define where it wants to be by 2020. To this end, the Commission proposes the following EU headline targets:
– 75 % of the population aged 20-64 should be employed.
– 3% of the EU’s GDP should be invested in R&D.
– The “20/20/20″ climate/energy targets should be met (including an increase to 30% of emissions reduction if the conditions are right).
– The share of early school leavers should be under 10% and at least 40% of the younger generation should have a tertiary degree.
– 20 million less people should be at risk of poverty.
These targets are interrelated and critical to our overall success. To ensure that each Member State tailors the Europe 2020 strategy to its particular situation, the Commission proposes that EU goals are translated into national targets and trajectories.
The targets are representative of the three priorities of smart, sustainable and inclusive growth but they are not exhaustive: a wide range of actions at national, EU and international levels will be necessary to underpin them. The Commission is putting forward seven flagship initiatives to catalyse progress under each priority theme: (keep reading…..)
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