EU Structural Funds

Part of 2. Questions to the Counsel General and Brexit Minister (in respect of his Brexit Minister responsibilities) – in the Senedd at 2:50 pm on 20 March 2019.

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Photo of Jeremy Miles Jeremy Miles Labour 2:50, 20 March 2019

(Translated)

Thanks to the Member for that question and the acknowledgement that communities across Wales have taken advantage of European funding during our time as Members. The contribution made by these funds to our economy and our society and sectors across Wales has been very important. In terms of what's going to happen in the future, there is a question at the moment regarding the decisions an commitment of the Westminster Government on this. We, as the Member will know, are pressing for a specific commitment that decisions on these sorts of issues will still be taken by a Welsh Government, and that there will no less funding available for that. Despite pressing for that for a while, at every opportunity that we have, those two commitments haven't been given clearly, so that question is still one that we are pushing for.

However, the question of regional support is slightly broader than that—the shared prosperity fund is the name given to it by the Government in Westminster. There are a number of other sources, and the question of what will be a follow-up is still being considered. The Government has established a steering committee under the chairmanship of Huw Irranca-Davies, and that looks at delivery mechanisms for the future—exactly the same sort of question the Member is asking: how can we deliver at a grass-roots level in a different way in the future? Perhaps he also knows that the Government has commissioned a project from the OECD that is looking at how this is happening in other countries and learning from international best practice so that we have evidence, within the structure, for schemes in the future. Part of that work will report this year and another part next year.