OECD Regions and Cities at a Glance 2022 provides a comprehensive assessment of how regions and cities across the OECD are progressing in their efforts to build stronger, more sustainable and more resilient economies and societies. The publication provides a unique comparative picture in a number of aspects connected to economic development, well-being, demographic change and environmental transition across regions and cities in OECD and selected non-OECD countries. The report assesses how regions and cities are adapting differently to the challenges of a strong recovery after the COVID-19 pandemic, the increasing pressure for energy transition and for ensuring affordable costs of living. The report focuses on the spatially heterogeneous effects of the COVID-19 pandemic as well as of those triggered by ongoing megatrends, such as urbanisation, digitalisation and demographic change.
The report is composed of four chapters, each with a specific thematic focus. Chapter 1 assesses economic performance across regions during the COVID-19 pandemic and subsequent recovery. It also describes longer-run trends in regional economic disparities within OECD countries. Indicators presented in the chapter include quarterly employment and unemployment, gross domestic product (GDP) per capita, productivity levels and growth, tourism, cultural industries, and trade and integration in global markets.
Chapter 2 examines progress on the environmental transition of regions through a wide range of indicators, including energy use, emissions by sector and exposure to extreme climate events. The chapter shows that, while most OECD countries aim for climate neutrality by 2050, progress is uneven between and within countries, with some regions still heavily relying on carbon-intensive energy sources.
Chapter 3 presents an overview of socio-demographic trends in regions and cities across OECD countries. It discusses how the projection of population trends, ageing and urbanisation are playing out in regions and cities. The chapter presents indicators on elderly dependency rate, within-country residential mobility, population growth and decline, as well as new evidence on the presence of migrants in OECD regions and their integration in regional labour markets.
Chapter 4 presents key aspects of inclusion and liveability in regions and cities, such as housing affordability, income inequalities and quality of the Internet connection. The chapter also assesses the health system’s capacity, poverty and access to services. It highlights how regions and cities adapted differently from the shock of the COVID-19 pandemic with respect to remote working, digitalisation and housing demand.
Throughout the publication, regional disparities in different domains are looked at through the persistence of disparities across regions and cities over space and time. More precisely, the report proposes several approaches to measure regional disparities:
A first, simple approach is the difference between the maximum and minimum regional values in a country (regional range).
A second approach consists of ranking regions by the value of an indicator and taking the ratio (or the difference) between the highest value representing 20% of the population and the lowest value of the regions representing 20% of the population. This approach assesses regional disparities less sensitive to possible outliers and cross-country differences in the size of regions.
A third approach consists of using standard composite indexes, such as the Theil general entropy index,1 or the Gini index, which reflect inequality among all regions. One advantage of the Theil index is that it allows to distinguish overall regional disparities in within-country and between-country components.
A fourth approach consists of summarising spatial disparities by type of territory. This includes using the degree of urbanisation or the OECD classifications of small administrative regions (Territorial Level 3, TL3), such as distinguishing between metropolitan regions, regions close to a metropolitan area and regions far from a metropolitan area.