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PRIVACY
Opinion

Local collaboration is the key to revitalising rural economies

Professor Dylan Jones-Evans looks at the difference between small firms in rural areas and those in urban neighbourhoods

Businesses on the high street of Llandrindod Wells in Powys(Image: WalesOnline/Rob Browne)

Much of what is written about entrepreneurship tends to assume that founders and their businesses are largely based in an urban environment and serving a large customer base, usually located within the immediate vicinity.

As a result, much of the general support being provided to new and smaller businesses from both the public and private sector tends to reflect the needs of those enterprises based in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s towns and cities.

However, as a recent review by the National Innovation Centre for Rural Enterprise (NICRE) has shown, there are major differences in small firms based in rural areas as compared to those found in urban neighbourhoods.

In particular, the whole environment in which business is undertaken in rural areas will be affected by the lower population and firm density as compared to urban areas. As a result, there will be consequences for the type of support and advice that may be appropriate.

For example, various studies have shown that rural firms are smaller, located further away from business support centres, and face considerable infrastructure constraints as well as reduced access to both skilled workers and customers.

Another potential constraint is that small firm managers are heavily embedded in their rural environment and as a result, they will emphasise local relationships above other considerations with a consequential impact on the way that they access resources.

One positive trend that has been developing for several years and that has grown significantly since the Covid-19 pandemic is the in-migration of a new type of entrepreneur from urban areas who are based in very different sectors, are not dependent on local markets and utilise a range of external advisors who are usually not located within their area.

And whilst there have previously been negative connotations around ‘incomers’ moving into rural areas, these new and very different types of businesses can revitalise local economies especially if they create contacts with existing local businesses.