Long term economic plan for the north-west set out by Prime Minister and Chancellor

8 Jan 2015 02:00 PM

More jobs, better transport connections, science investment and a better quality of life are at the heart of the long term economic plan for the north-west.

The Prime Minister and Chancellor today (8 January 2015) set out their six-point long-term economic plan for the north-west, highlighting what has been delivered, what is underway and the next steps in building a northern powerhouse that enables the region to reach its potential as a driving force in the UK economy.

At a speech at Old Granada Studios, the site of what will become the new theatre called The “Factory Manchester” the pair set out the detailed plan at the start of a two day tour of the north-west. This is the first in a series of regional tours that the Chancellor and Prime Minister will be undertaking throughout the country in the coming weeks and months, to highlight what the government is doing to ensure a truly national recovery.

In their speech, the Prime Minister and Chancellor showed how the north-west has seen the joint fastest growth in output per head in the UK in 2013, the most recent year for which data is available. There are more people in work in the region than at any time on record, with an average of 200 more people in employment per day over the past year.

But more needs to be done to build on this strong performance to ensure that the region fulfils its potential. So the Prime Minster and Chancellor also set out their six-point long-term economic plan for the north-west:

  1. to increase the long term growth rate of the north-west to at least the forecast growth rate of the whole UK, by building a northern powerhouse, which could generate an £18 billion real terms increase in the size of the north-west economy by 2030. In real terms this is equivalent to over £2,000 per person in the north-west, or a 50% increase, compared to if the North West continued to grow at its long run average
  2. to raise the employment rate in the north-west to that of the UK average. That will ensure over 100,000 more people in employment in the north-west during the next Parliament by supporting the private sector, backing business investment and new start-ups in our drive for full employment in the north
  3. to deliver the largest ever and most sustained investment in the long-term transport infrastructure of the north-west. With £4.5bn committed to electrification of existing rail lines, new trains, new urban transport, and a major upgrade to the roads across the whole region. This is on top of the committed £42.6bn investment in new high speed connections from the North of England to the South and the potential for investment in high speed connections east to west across the north of England
  4. to make the north-west a global centre of outstanding scientific innovation, with a particular focus on material science, biomedicine, supercomputing and energy with major investments in the excellent universities and NHS teaching hospitals of the region, and making sure the energy resources are used to the benefit of local people
  5. to raise the quality of life in the north-west by supporting its great cultural and sporting strengths, building up to 25,000 new homes, nurturing the rural environment and improving education outcomes in the region’s schools so over 75,000 more pupils attend outstanding schools
  6. to give greater power and voice to the great cities and counties of the north-west, delivering a new directly-elected Mayor for Greater Manchester, and supporting other areas with appropriate plans to give people greater control over their local economy and local government

The size of the prize if the northern powerhouse can be created in the north-west is clear:

There are no quick fixes to achieving these important goals, so the Prime Minister and Chancellor are also setting out a specific timetable to deliver the key concepts of this plan over the five years of the next parliament, and the following decade (see details in notes to editors). As important next steps in the plan for the north-west, the pair announced three new measures to improve transport links, invest in science, and boost house-building:

After the speech, the Prime Minister and Chancellor will be visiting a variety of businesses across the north-west to hear how the government’s long-term economic plan is delivering for them and what more can be done to build the northern powerhouse. Today they will hold a roundtable with key health experts to discuss how to build on the north-west’s position as a health science centre. They will then visit two prominent local businesses that have benefitted from the region’s recovery under the government’s long-term economic plan. On Friday, they will hold a business roundtable and visit other local businesses to hear what more the government can do to support local businesses to expand and go on creating jobs. The Secretary of State for Transport, Patrick McLoughlin is visiting Cumbria on Thursday to see how new improvements to the local rail network will help connect the region.

The Chancellor of the Exchequer said:

The economy of the north-west is growing, creating jobs, and doing so more quickly than other parts of the country. That has not, frankly, been the case over much of the last thirty or forty years, as our economy has become more unbalanced, and the gap between the economic performances of the north of England lagged behind that of London and the south.

Our message today is that is not inevitable, it is not something we should accept; it is instead something we have in our power to overcome.

Rebalancing our national economy, ensuring that the economic future of the north is as bright, if not brighter, than other parts of the UK, is the ambition we should set ourselves. We achieve that not by pulling down our capital city, or diminishing its success. Having one of the greatest global cities on earth, located two hundred miles to our south, should be an asset, not a weakness.

No, we achieve this rebalancing of our economy by pursuing a clear and consistent and sustained plan to hold up the whole of the north of England, including the north-west. Creating a northern powerhouse of jobs, investment, prosperity and bright futures, that is the objective of our long term economic plan for the north-west that we set today.

The Prime Minister said:

When it comes to the next generation – to Britain’s long-term future – few things are more important than rebalancing our economy. We can only have a strong British economy if no part of the country is left behind. In the USA they’ve got major centres of industry not just in New York but in Los Angeles, Chicago, Houston, and Atlanta. That is what we should aspire to in the UK, economic might not just held in one city but spread right across our country.

So we need a strong London, but we need a northern powerhouse too. In the modern world growth is being powered by big cities. The top 600 cities in the world contain just 20 per cent of global population but create 60 per cent of global GDP. When you get that critical mass of people – it amplifies jobs and ideas and businesses. The cities and towns of the north of England can have that critical mass. If we join them together as a team and let them pool their strengths, if we back their scientists and innovators, if we back their thriving cultural life, make them great places to live and give them powerful elected voices, then we can create a northern powerhouse.

Further information

Timetable for Action - Implementation in the north-west 2015 – 2025

2015:

Connecting up the north

Science, innovation and energy

Quality of life

A voice for the north

2016:

Connecting up the north

Science, innovation and energy

Quality of life

A voice for the north

2017:

Connecting up the north

Science, innovation and energy

Quality of life

A voice for the north

2018:

Connecting up the north

Science, innovation and energy

Quality of life

2019:

Connecting up the north

Science, innovation and energy

Quality of life

2020:

Connecting up the north

A voice for the north

Science, innovation and energy

Implementation in the north-west: beyond 2020

2025:

2030:

Analysis of the benefits to the north-west’s economy

To calculate the boost in the north-west’s economic output if it were to grow at the same rate as the UK as a whole between now and 2030, we used data from the Office of National Statistics (regional gross value added (GVA) and national population data) along with the Office of Budget Responsibility’s economic GDP forecasts.

Regional economic output is measured annually by the ONS. The published data estimate the GVA in each region in nominal prices with data available from 1997 to 2013. Therefore this data captures both changes in price and volume over time.

Between 1997 and 2013 the north-west grew more slowly than the UK as a whole. The average annual growth rate of the North West’s GVA was 3.8 per cent which was below the UK’s average annual growth rate of 4.2 per cent over the same period.

The OBR’s forecast period is up to 2019 after which we assume that the North West grows in line with UK trend nominal GDP growth of 4.6 per cent per annum. If between 2013 and 2030, the north-west were to grow in line with the OBR’s forecast for the UK average growth in nominal GDP, its GVAwould be £153,140m higher in 2030 than in 2013.