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Local Employment and Economic Development (LEED Programme)

Cultural and Creative Sectors and Local Development

 

 

EU-CreativeEurope_funded

We provide evidence and guidance to cities and regions on ways to maximize the economic and social impact of culture and support the creative economy  

In co-operation with the European Commission and part of the European Framework for Action on Cultural Heritage 

 

 

 

      A collage of images representing culture: Mona Lisa, hot air balloon, tourists, Venus de Milo head, musician, Van Gogh's starry night blue painting, airplane, film

Read the report


Areas of work

Maximising the impact of culture and cultural heritage on local development

Following the decline of traditional manufacturing industries, museums and other cultural heritage sites have increasingly been seen as drivers of community regeneration and thus a source of revenue and new jobs. Cultural heritage and a vibrant creative economy can increase territorial attractiveness for talent and investment. At the same time, the role of culture in spurring innovation as well as supporting well-being, health, life-long learning and the creation of social capital have become prominent.

Streams of work

  • Understanding and increasing cultural participation
  • Cross-sectoral strategies and partnerships

Increasing the jobs potential of cultural and creative industries

The creative economy relies on creative talent as the primary source of value. The demand for skilled creative workers is strong and rapidly evolving, both in cultural and creative sectors and other sectors of the economy. To reap these job creation benefits, cities and regions need more reliable data to shape their
policies and address the needs of creative employers and self-employed creatives.

Streams of work

  • Understanding trends and the geography of the creative economy workforce
  • Local strategies to address the skills needs of CCS and self-employed creatives

 

Supporting business creation, innovation and growth

The cultural and creative sectors are largely composed of micro, small and medium sized enterprises and auto-entrepreneurs. Such firms co-exist with a few large global players. There is a strong demand for better and more reliable data, at subnational level, on the performance of these enterprises, as well as on ways to adapt business support ecosystems to their specific needs.

Streams of work

  • Understanding the performance of CCS
  • Adapting business support ecosystems to the needs of CCS and self-employed creatives

 

 

Public and private finance for culture and creative sectors

‌The activities of culture and creative sectors are financed through various sources, from the public, private and non-profit sectors. Overall, local government “culture, recreation and religion” spending accounts for roughly 60% of total public expenditure in this area in the OECD. Such public direct and indirect financing is often combined with funding provided by nonprofit and business organisations, and individual donations.

Streams of work

  • Trends and issues in local government expenditure on culture
  • Innovation in public and private financing  

Participation benefits

  • Rapid assessment by the OECD of the CCS performance and policy ecosystem in your region/city.
  • Knowledge building & peer learning through participation in four thematic policy seminars to learn from the latest academic and policy research.
  • Training two editions of the OECD Summer Academy on Cultural and Creative Industries.
  • International visibility of your efforts to support the creative economy.

 Learn more about the project

 

Events

3 June 2022| WEBINAR LAUNCH The Culture Fix: Creative people, places and industries

16 Dec 2021 | Public and private finance for culture and creative sectors

1 Dec 2021 | Culture and creativity: From Emilia-Romagna to Europe and Beyond

25-26 Feb 2021 | SME support ecosystems for Cultural and Creative Sectors 

27-28 Jan 2021 | Increasing the job creation potential of Cultural and Creative Sectors 

27 Jan 2021 | SPOTLIGHT: Covid-19 and Music & the Night Time Economy 


Contact

For further information on the project, please contact Ekaterina.Travkina@oecd.org.