2. Lessons learned from the previous programming periods as outlined by the participants (based on the questionnaires filled out and received prior to the event)
2.1 Baselines
- Timeframe challenges: overlapping programming periods, late adoption of the legislative framework, delays in the programming process, coordination of multiple actors.
- Administrative challenges: programme structures cannot always benefit from adopted simplifications; complex set of rules, shift to performance monitoring, staff continuity and need for multidisciplinary knowledge of staff.
- Financial challenges: disconnection between funding resources, liquidity issues, unforeseeable outcomes of calls for proposals, long reimbursement periods, high costs, low budgetary flexibility, low absorption, low added value.
- Technological challenges: shared IT system, programme interoperability, modern technologies, limitations of data reuse.
- Lack of adaptability: need for flexible project budgeting and more relaxed employee redeployment legislation.
- Achievement of results: unclear indicators, lack of programme visibility, poor understanding of indicators and milestones.
- Cooperation and trust: need for bottom-up approach, synergies within institutions, investments in HR development.
- Place-based approach: functional areas, lack of level playing field for regions, misalignment between regional and national needs, poorly defined goals.
- Future challenges: the green and digital transition, climate change, migrations, demographic change, global competitiveness of the EU.
Where are we now? What is the way forward?
We need Cohesion Policy. We need European Territorial Cooperation. The green and digital transition, climate change, demographic change and development gaps remain key challenges to be tackled in the future.
Preserving key principles, tailoring action to meet the actual needs of regions, introducing simplifications for the managing authority and other stakeholders, building administrative capacity, embracing the place-based approach, ensuring synergies with other policies, developing the post-2027 Cohesion Policy proposal by July 2025.
Emerging challenges such as security, migrations, the twin transition, education, housing, and EU enlargement are coming to the forefront; Cohesion Policy will also have to tackle issues such as low absorption, complementarity of funding systems, place-based approaches.
2.2 Key takeaways:
- Participants expressed satisfaction that consultation was launched early enough and that the discussion on ways to tackle future challenges was kicked off in time.
- Participants welcomed the ‘’less is more’’ approach.
- Cohesion Policy should not be the core development policy in Slovenia. The discussion should focus on development in general, not only on cohesion-driven development. Other development policies and all available development funding (EU, national, regional. etc.) should be considered as well.
- Instead of sectoral, local, or regional projects, we should rather consider development projects and match them with different funding sources. Combining national and cohesion funding is key. We need integrated projects and system complementarities. Different programmes should be better aligned, there should be stronger synergies between them.
- A better organisational structure is a must to enable a more efficient Cohesion Policy implementation with shorter implementation processes.
- Building trust between stakeholders within the system is necessary, but breakthrough cannot happen without legislative changes and ‘’cultivation’’ of mindset in several areas (performance-based funding, i.e., linking EU funding to the achievement of outputs, results, milestones).
- It is worth considering supporting ready-to-go projects at the national level and, consequently, setting aside a dedicated amount of funding under each call for proposals to ‘’cover’’ at least most of the applications evaluated positively or considered ready-to-go, given that municipalities invest large sums of money in the development of such projects.
- The system needs stability and continuity given that institutional, IT, and regulatory frameworks constantly change. We also need a leaner set-up.
- Proposals for simplification: continuity of Cohesion Policy implementation processes, appropriate IT support, regular staff training (technical assistance funding is unevenly distributed at regional and local level). No funding was set aside for staff training at regional and local level.
- Introduction of simplifications should be well-thought-out to avoid creating unnecessary additional work (e.g. introduction of lump sum funding complicates the work of the Josef Stefan Institute).
- Economic goals are well defined but underachieved. SRIPs carried out the relevant prioritisation, however, there was simply not enough funding to achieve economic goals.
- We need to address competence gaps; we need a higher level of collaboration.
- We need to ensure synergies between programmes and collaboration with universities and research organisations. We need to embed development goals in regional development policies and set aside Cohesion Policy funding to support the achievement of research and development goals.
- Integrated planning calls for alignment between spatial policy and Cohesion Policy.
- Municipalities often struggle to secure their share of financing when it comes to co-financing projects.
- The option of co-financing Interreg programmes with national resources should be reintroduced.
- A specific feature of Slovenia, in relation to Europe and European calls for proposals, is the small size of municipalities. As administrative units, they can be participating entities or applicants – this can be a very big obstacle in certain calls for proposals (e.g. European Urban Initiative), as the basic condition of the size of the entity (e.g. in terms of number of residents) is not fulfilled. Thus, municipalities are forced to adapt their project ideas to meet the initial size criterion, which worsens their chances of meeting the other criteria and being positively evaluated. This aspect should be taken into account when designing EU programmes and conditions, and the relevant exceptions for smaller countries/units should be introduced.
- We should rethink and adjust programme priorities according to the current Slovene and European challenges (yes to green transition, but yes to other themes as well).