The political-administrative perspective
        
Economic promotion depends to a significant extent on a
        carrier structure. It will always involve volunteer activities, but it
        cannot depend solely on them. It is crucial that there are professional
        organizations which are responsible for the implementation of defined
        activities.
        
From this perspective, it depends on the polity of given
        country whether economic promotion activities should rather be pursued
        by local or regional authorities. There are three issues:
        
          - 
            Is the country centralized or is there a certain
            degree of local and/or regional autonomy? 
- 
            How many administrative layers are there? 
- 
            How are responsibilities distributed between
            administrative layers? 
Centralization and decentralization
        
Successful local or regional development initiatives
        evolve over extensive periods of time, and they involve intense
        interaction within a relatively stable core of stakeholders which learn
        jointly and establish a certain degree of trust. In highly centralized
        countries, it is common to find that state representatives at the local
        and regional level are installed by central government and rotate
        frequently (often due to the reasoning that too much collusion with
        locally based stakeholders may invite corruption and/or erode the
        commitment of state representatives with the policy objectives of
        central government). This makes local or regional economic development
        initiatives difficult, in particular if other stakeholders, such as
        business associations, are not well organized and competent.
        
Number of layers
        
The success of local and regional economic development
        initiatives is correlated to the match between administrative borders
        and economic spaces. If an economic space, say a regional cluster,
        involves a number of localities and local governments but is only a tiny
        fraction of the territory of the next higher level administrative unit,
        things become difficult. Government involvement in, say, cluster
        promotion becomes tricky because it requires collaboration between
        administrative units for whose collaboration there is no administrative
        provision and no established rules and routines.
        
It is common to find that nation-states have three
        administrative layers: municipal, provincial and national. With this
        structure, it is rather by chance that administrative borders and
        economic spaces match. But then again, there is no guarantee at all that
        more diversified administrative structures (such as the five layers in
        Germany) match with economic spaces.
        
Distribution of responsibilities
        
Finally, there is the question how responsibilities are
        distributed among different layers of government. Do decentralized
        layers of government have a clear mandate to pursue economic
        development? And if that is so, does this mandate match with the
        distribution of responsibilities for fields which are the basis for key
        economic development instruments, such as spatial planning,
        administration/preparation of real estate, education and training,
        permits and registration, and so forth? For a given layer of government,
        be it local or regional, it is difficult to fulfil an ascribed role in
        economic development if the responsibilities for the majority of these
        activities lie with other layers of government.
        
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