Pictured at the launch of the NWRA's pre-Budget submission are, from left: NWRA Director Denis Kelly; John Daly, economist with the NWRA and Cllr John Naughten, NWRA Cathaoirleach. Pic: James Connolly
THE Government was urged last week to provide the Northern and Western region with a stimulus package worth at least €570 million to kickstart development across the area.
The call was made by the Northern and Western Regional Assembly (NWRA) in a submission to the Department of Finance ahead of Budget 2024 next month.
The NWRA – which represents the counties of Donegal, Sligo, Leitrim, Mayo, Galway, Roscommon, Cavan, and Monaghan – is one of three Regional Assemblies tasked with helping strengthen the development of Ireland’s regions in a strategic manner. It says a multi-million-euro stimulus package is necessary to stem growing regional inequality and to deliver balanced regional development in Ireland.
To address these challenges in the long-term, the NWRA is also calling on the Government to adopt a policy of ‘positive discrimination’ for the Northern and Western Region in its rollout of infrastructure projects in the National Development Plan (NDP).
According to the NWRA, a policy of positive discrimination would result in rebalancing legacy underinvestment in new infrastructure projects for the region; increased capital expenditure, to bring more infrastructure projects of scale to the Northern and Western Region; and reforms to the public spending code to ensure the region’s population size and rural structure are accounted for in the planning of regional-development projects.
“A legacy of underinvestment continues to inhibit the growth ambitions of the Northern and Western Region of Ireland,” said John Daly, Economist with the Northern and Western Regional Assembly.
“Without access to modern road, public transport, health and port services, our region will never be able to provide a meaningful counterbalance to the rapid expansion of the Greater Dublin Area and avoid the over-concentration of population in the east of Ireland. That’s why we are calling on the Government to provide the Northern and Western Region with a €570 million stimulus package to kickstart high-value development and save the region from its economic stagnation.
“Our proposal for a multi-million-euro stimulus package would support projects and initiatives designed to stimulate high-value economic activity in the Northern and Western Region of Ireland, helping to ensure our region becomes smarter in how we educate and train people, more specialised in the types of enterprise we attract and more urban in how we grow our housing stock,” he commented.
Citizens’ Assembly
THE NWRA is also calling for a Citizens’ Assembly to be set up to examine how greater levels of regional autonomy can be delivered in Ireland, with Ireland’s centralised government system credited for high levels of regional inequality and disengagement in rural regions.
The NWRA is calling for the delivery of these priorities due to the fact the Northern and Western Region of Ireland is officially classified as a ‘Transition Region’ – a designation that is given to regions in which the GDP per capita is between 75 percent and 100 percent of the EU27 average, the only region in Ireland to hold such a status.
Likewise, the European Parliament’s Committee on Regional Development also categorised the Northern and Western Region as a ‘Lagging Region’, which is defined as a region that faces specific development challenges, such as low productivity and educational attainment, a weaker skills base and business environment.
The Government has an opportunity in the budget to make a genuine effort to address the regional imbalance that still exists in our country, and the NWRA call shows exactly how it could make a real difference by directing substantial investment towards the Northern and Western Region.
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