Transcript Slide 1

West Midlands’ Performance &
‘Rebalancing’ in Perspective
URESG meeting, Cardiff
David Bailey
Recession and recovery? (Diagram from the NIESR, 2013)
Comparative Recovery
The ‘Regional’ Challenge
“The weak performance of the UK economy… the ongoing financial
uncertainties in the Eurozone and the global economy, declining
wages and cuts in the public sector mean supporting private sector
growth and jobs in our cities is more critical than ever”.
Cities Outlook, Centre for Cities, 2012; p.6
“To boost the scale and pace of economic recovery in the region, create
more new jobs and stimulate more demand for higher level skills, there
is a need to up-skill the workforce in existing businesses, to
improve their productivity and help them to exploit new market
opportunities. In parallel it will be important to attract more
businesses and jobs in higher skilled and value added clusters”
The West Midlands Economy Post Recession: Key Issues and Challenges, West Midlands
Regional Observatory, 2010; p.20
Set against a long-term poor track record
• Long-term underinvestment in infrastructure
• Long run process of deindustrialisation and a wider economic
structure reliant on low growth sectors; lower proportion of high
growth firms and lower rates of enterprise
• A relatively poor employment performance in the private sector
• 2% employment growth 1998-2008 compared to 19% nationally
• Birmingham -7.7%; Stoke -16.4% (Newcastle +10.2%)
• Not enough High GVA industries
Set against a long-term poor track record
• A relatively poor education and skills record; dependence on lower
value added sectors and clusters leads to relatively low skill levels
and skills shortages
• Relatively poor performance in developing ‘knowledge economy’
sectors and in R&D spend
• Pockets of high levels of unemployment and worklessness;
issues of high youth unemployment and long-term unemployment
especially in Birmingham
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“There are over 32,000 young people claiming JSA in Birmingham - enough to fill
Birmingham City FC’s St Andrews Stadium” (Centre for Cities, 2012); youth claimant
rate 4th worst of UK cities
Long-term unemployed accounted for 24% of Birmingham claimants by end of 2011;
whilst long-term claimant rate second worst of UK cities
Poor track record in developing knowledge intensive jobs
Source: The Work Foundation, 2009
Long-term employment growth
160
South East
North East
East Midlands
West Midlands
Eastern
Yorks-Humber
North West
140
130
120
110
100
90
80
70
2007
2005
2003
2001
1999
1997
1995
1993
1991
1989
1987
1985
1983
1981
1979
1977
1975
1973
60
1971
Employment Index 1971=100
150
Contrasts in performance of region in recession; since
late1990s relative deterioration in West Midlands
18
16
UK
West Midlands
Regional Claimant Count Rate (%)
14
East Midlands
North East
12
South East
10
8
6
4
2
0
1971 1973 1975 1977 1979 1981 1983 1985 1987 1989 1991 1993 1995 1997 1999 2001 2003 2005 2007
Q1
Q1
Q1
Q1
Q1
Q1
Q1
Q1
Q1
Q1
Q1
Q1
Q1
Q1
Q1
Q1
Q1
Q1
Q1
Source: ONS, Regional Claimant Count Rates
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Widening GVA gap
Regional Economic Performance (GVA per head)
£22,000
£20,000
£18,000
West Midlands
£16,000
England
£14,000
£12,000
£10,000
2002
2003
2004
2005
Source: West Midlands Regional Observatory
2006
2007
Weak Industrial Structure
In GVA and employment terms high value added activities make
relatively modest contributions to the regional economy
Sector/Cluster
Industry / service
Emerging high value added
private sector activities
Environmental technologies (£3bn GVA, 74,000 jobs)
Medical technologies (£250m GVA, 7,000 jobs)
Specialist business services (£5bn GVA)
Digital media (£150m GVA, 9,500 jobs)
Electricity, gas and water (£2bn GVA, 14,000 jobs)
Traditional private sector activities
Transport technologies (£4bn GVA, 92,000 jobs)
Building technologies (£11bn GVA, 220,000 jobs)
Food and drink (£3bn GVA, 58,000 jobs)
Lower value added private sector
activities
Business services (£23bn GVA, 440,000 jobs)
Wholesale and retail (£12bn GVA, 360,000 jobs)
Public Sector activities
Education (£6bn GVA, 240,000 jobs)
Health and social care (£7bn GVA, 277,000 jobs)
Source: West Midlands Regional Observatory, 2010
West Midlands – Manufacturing GVA 1997-2009
Fell by 23%: worse than any other UK region
Over-valuation of sterling badly affected the
region’s auto and transport clusters
plus it wasn't until Mandelson arrived that
Labour actually had an industrial policy
West Midlands: The 08-09 Recession and Beyond
• Output drop and unemployment rise in West Midlands worse than
many other regions during 2008-9 recession (not a surprise)
• BUT bounce back more rapid until 2012 – rebalancing effect?
certain parts of manufacturing, exports (?), modest ‘onshoring’
• More rapid jobs growth – WM out performed other regions until
2012 then slowed – now unemployment rising.
• Region reasonably placed? (Deloitte, 2011/12): public sector job
cuts; tax rises and benefit cuts; ‘mini-revival’ in parts of
manufacturing; weakness in financial services; prospect for house
prices.
• Output PMI early 2013: 52.5 (51.5 UK) for last 12 months
• Challenges around youth unemployment esp. in cities
• Private sector job growth sufficient to offset public sector cuts?
West Mids Economic Performance
Not surprising given structure of West Mids economy
Exports
… where to?
Upgrading the ‘middle’?
Some recent shifts:
• ‘Personalised manufacturing’... Car industry?
• ‘Functional’ to ‘hybrid’ goods: hybridity. Creative/design and
service element
• Brands, market repositioning
• Links ‘creative’ non ‘creative’ sectors – ‘platforms’ – see report by
Lisa De Propris and others for NESTA on mapping creative
industries
• Diversity / ‘serendipitous spillovers’
• related variety: ‘smart specialisation’ (clusters and a regional
approach)
Industrial Policy in the Auto Industry…
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Automotive Council e.g. sourcing road map 2011
Skills
Loan Guarantees
RGF support  JLR, Nissan, GM, supply chain,
AMSCI (£125 m)
TSB + EPSRC investment into research
OLEV
MAS
Scrappage scheme (2009-10)
Automotive Campus at Warwick Uni
Local ‘smart specialisation’ approaches: NVN  open innovation
approach
And if we really want to ‘rebalance’ the economy...
Industrial Policy targeted at manufacturing
• Capital allowances
• Focus corporation tax cuts for manufacturing firms
that increase output
• National insurance holidays for firms that take on
workers
• Better R&D tax credits
• Better support for exporters
• Manufacturing loan fund? (Automotive –
Relocalisation / Repatriation of supply chain)
• Green Investment Bank? SME Bank?
Plus...
• Lessons from Germany: Part-time wage
subsidies
• Takeover Law
• Rebuilding fractured supply chains
• Other instruments: procurement policy
Assembly success but more support needed for Supply
Chain…
 Big assembly success, but not enough components sourced here…
 Reshoring/onshoring opportunity: depreciation of sterling, plus rise in transport
costs, plus rising wage costs in far east also make it possible to repatriate some
components sourcing to UK…
 Plus supply chain ‘resilience’ issue (Japanese earthquake/tsunami)
 Automotive Council, + Work of SMMT in ‘matching’ OEMs and component
suppliers
 Big issue for smaller firms – access to finance, RGF / LEPs bid to address this, and
Advanced Manufacturing Supply Chain Initiative BUT small scale
 Key local question: how to make most of JLR and other investment for supply
chain in UK? And help local suppliers win more work? help with winning orders,
access to finance, skills.
What type of IP is this?
• Not ‘picking winners’ – rather sees Industrial
Policy as a process of discovery (see Dani
Rodrick) + linked to ‘smart specialisation’
Policy: (How) can LEPs be effective RDAs?
‘Old’ system of RDAs not perfect BUT...
• Still not clear exactly what regional growth drivers /
levers LEPs will be able to influence
• What’s the Offer? Localism Act, RGF, Enterprise
Zones, possibility for faster planning, Growing
Places Fund, City Deals...
Recentralisation / Decentralisation
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Recentralisation of IP to Whitehall
Centralised industrial policy not likely to work
LEPs: transport, housing, planning, enterprise (?)
Skills? **
Business engagement?
RGF big cut in funding – need more scope for
LEPs to raise finance (TiFs / Business Rates /
bonds?)
 RDAs assets  back to Whitehall / HCA.
 But, ‘City Deals’ a good first step?
Cont’d...
 Risk of excessive fragmentation – functional economic
geography? B’ham / Black Country? **
 Capability/capacity to make strategically informed
decisions on economic development?
• Need for ‘intermediate level’: Intelligence, monitoring,
accessing EU funding, regional planning, clusters and
innovation
• Recent BIS Select Ctte Report on LEPs: short-termism,
confusion, lack of confidence
• Question: can we really ‘do’ smart specialisation
regionally?
‘Under-development traps’ - lack of capacity or unwillingness of ‘local
elites’.
• Lack of trust
– Within single local authority
– Across two (or more ) local authorities within ‘natural economy’
– Between two overlapping authorities in a two tier situation
• Under-bounding
– Serious under-bounding of local authority
– Inappropriate bounding for LEP – key problem
• Culture of ‘conditional localism’
– Priority of ‘local’ becomes to respond to the ‘national’, rather than local needs
and priorities
• Insufficient local capacity
Birmingham, Black Country and Coventry
Travel to work
Sandwell
Lichfield
Greater Birmingham
and Solihull LEP –
strange boundaries?
Walsall
Wolverhampton
Dudley
Birmingham
Built-up area
Solihull
Coventry
Do LEPs reflect natural economies in practice?
Economics behind move to LEPs
Competing economic ideas in government: neo-classical
perspective (NEG) AND place-based approaches
Six key limitations of economics behind new approach:
• 1. A two region model
• 2. tension in approach to cities outside London
• 3. Conditional Tone towards cities outside London
• 4. limited outcomes in practice?
• 5. Bottom-up creation of LEPs  ‘right geography’?
• 6. what happens to LEPs not connected to a core city?
Summary
• West Mids: relatively poor long-run economic
performance, but reasonably well placed today if we can
develop a regional IP?
• Industrial Policy: process, smart specialisation but regional
scale important
• LEPs need genuine powers and the ability to raise
funding: for some cities, govt listening?
• Right scale? Intermediate ‘join up’ of LEPs’ work critical to
use public monies effectively – as a minimum: intelligence
and info gathering base, pursuing effective cluster and
innovation strategies and accessing EU funding
• Heseltine Report  how much real decentralisation?
• Competing economic ideas in government
Thanks for listening.
Comments, Questions welcome!
[email protected]