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INVESTMENT AND ECONOMIC GROWTH Scottish Enterprise December 2007 Table of Contents 1. Introduction .................................................................................................. 3 2. Why investment is important ........................................................................ 4 3. What we mean by investment ...................................................................... 5 4. Evidence on investment as a driver of economic performance .................... 5 5. Measuring investment .................................................................................. 7 5.1 Capital stock ........................................................................................... 7 5.2 Capital Services ...................................................................................... 8 5.3 Gross Fixed Capital Formation (GFCF) ................................................ 10 5.3 Business investment ............................................................................. 13 5.3.1 Information and communication technology (ICT) investm ................ 14 5.3.2 Scottish business investment ............................................................. 15 5.3.3 Why is business investment in the UK lower than other countries? ... 16 5.4 Government investment ........................................................................ 17 6. Conclusions ............................................................................................... 19 Data Appendix ............................................................................................... 20 2 INVESTMENT AND ECONOMIC GROWTH Summary Investment, defined as the physical capital available to workers, is an important driver of productivity growth. The UK has one of the lowest levels of capital stock (measured per worker or as a proportion of GDP) among OECD countries, although latest data is for 2001. No capital stock data is available for Scotland. Scotland’s rate of annual investment (gross fixed capital formation) is estimated to be slightly below the UK average. The UK’s rate, however, lags most other OECD economies – and has done so for a number of years. Scotland’s investment rate lags each of the Arc of Prosperity countries (equivalent to between £2 billion and £7 billion less investment a year). Business investment accounts for the majority of overall investment. The UK’s rate business of business investment lags all other OECD countries, although it is unclear why this is. No robust data exists for Scotland, although performance is likely to be similar to the UK’s. Government investment rates in the UK also lag most other OECD economies, leading to a relatively poor infrastructure. There is a lack of robust data on capital stock and annual investment (total and business investment) for Scotland. This is a significant evidence gap in the understanding of Scotland’s relative productivity performance. 1. Introduction Economic growth is dependent on labour utilisation (how many people are employed) and labour productivity (how much output labour is able to produce). In recent years employment has been growing strongly in both the UK and Scotland, with employment rates amongst the highest in the OECD. However, both the UK’s and Scotland’s productivity rates fail to match the top OECD performers and this has resulted in lower economic growth and prosperity (GDP per head) than could potentially be achieved. The UK’s relatively poor growth performance has prompted a large programme of economic research by the UK government on the factors influencing productivity. This analysis has identified five drivers (outlined in Figure 1 below): Investment Skills Enterprise Innovation Competition This review considers the first of these, investment. The analysis draws on existing research, for example the HM Treasury’s ‘Productivity in the UK’ series 1, and outlines what is meant by investment, why it is an important driver of growth, what the potential measures/indicators of investment are and how the UK and Scottish economies perform. Where available, 1 HM Treasury (various reports, 2000 to 2007) http://www.hmtreasury.gov.uk/documents/enterprise_and_productivity/the_evidence/ent_prod_index.cfm 3 performance is compared to the ‘Arc of Prosperity’ countries outlined in the Government Economic Strategy2. Figure 1: Growth accounting and the five drivers of productivity growth (HM Treasury 3) TFP = Total factor productivity (how efficiently labour and capital are combined using technology, organisation, etc) 2. Why investment is important HM Treasury productivity research series of reports notes that the amount and quality of physical capital associated with a job is a key determinant of workers’ labour productivity. Investment in plant, machinery and infrastructure can increase the productive capacity of an economy by raising the capital stock available to workers. Specifically, raising the capital stock can drive productivity growth in two ways: ‘Capital deepening’ increases the amount of plant and machinery workers have to work with New technologies embodied in investment can introduce more efficient plant and machinery into the production process and boost productivity. It is important to note that increased capital investment alone may not lead to productivity gains and depends on, among other things, the skills of workers to use capital assets, the skills of management to invest in the appropriate types of capital assets and the right goods and services being produced to meet or create market demand (an indicator of enterprise). This highlights the inter-relationships between the five drivers of productivity outlined in Figure 1 above. 2 The Scottish Government Economic Strategy (2007) has identified five small European countries as broad benchmarks for Scotland – Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Ireland and Norway http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Publications/2007/11/12115041/0 3 Productivity in the UK 6: Progress and new evidence (2007) HM Treasury http://www.hmtreasury.gov.uk/media/6/B/bud06_productivity_513.pdf 4 3. What we mean by investment There are various types of investment that have are important to economic growth4: physical capital – refers to the overall level of physical assets (plant, machinery, buildings), that directly influences how much a unit of labour can produce. ICT investment – is a specific component of physical capital and is the most recent example of technological change that can influence production processes across a wide range of sectors. infrastructure – refers to investment that provides a base to support other economic activities. This is often publicly funded due to its wide public benefits, for example transport. public sector capital investment – includes government investment in physical assets that support productivity growth by contributing to a healthy and skilled workforce (investment in school and hospital buildings, medical equipment, etc). 4. Evidence on investment as a driver of economic performance The Scottish Government Economic Strategy, quoting research into the reasons why UK productivity lags behind other countries, notes that different levels of investment in physical capital stock accounts for 51% of the productivity gap with the United States, 80% of the gap with France and 81% with Germany5. Other empirical studies also show that levels of overall physical capital stock are closely correlated with productivity performance. A study in 1991 looking at the relationship between investment in machinery and equipment and economic growth in selected developed countries found that increasing investment by 1% would increase GDP per capita by 0.7%6. At the firm level, a study in 2000 looking at labour productivity gaps in the UK between foreign and domestic-owned firms found that the former operated with 50% more capital per worker, and that this explained a large part of the differences in labour productivity between the two types of firm. This result was consistent across most manufacturing and service sectors7. Data produced by the IMF8 also suggests a positive relationship between the capital stock available to workers (capital stock per unit of labour) and productivity in eighteen OECD countries over the 1996-2000 period (Figure 2). This data also suggests that the UK has low levels of both capital stock and productivity and is out performed by each of the Arc of Prosperity countries. 4 Productivity in the UK 6: Progress and new evidence (2007) HM Treasury http://www.hmtreasury.gov.uk/media/6/B/bud06_productivity_513.pdf O’Mahoney, M., and de Boer, W., (2002), Britain’s relative productivity performance: Has anything changed? National Institute Economic Review. 5 6 HM Treasury Productivity Series http://www.hmtreasury.gov.uk/documents/enterprise_and_productivity/the_evidence/ent_prod_index.cfm 7 Nicholas Oulton: Why do foreign-owned firms in the UK have higher labour productivity? (2000) 8 IMF Country Report: United Kingdom: Selected Issues (2003) http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/scr/2003/cr0347.pdf 5 Figure 2 Output (productivity) per unit of labour Capital stock per unit of labour and GDP per unit of labour (productivity), 1996-2000 Index UK=100 180 Ireland 160 140 Norway Iceland 120 Denmark Finland 100 Germany UK 80 80 100 120 140 160 180 Capital per unit of labour Source: IMF Note: See data appendix for full data Data for UK regions also suggests a positive correlation between investment (defined as net capital expenditure) and productivity9. Scotland though appears to be a slight ‘outlier’, with low GVA per worker relative to net capital expenditure (Figure 3). Figure 3 GVA per worker £ GVA and net capital expenditure per worker in UK regions, 2004 (£) 90,000 80,000 70,000 60,000 50,000 40,000 WM 30,000 20,000 Wa 10,000 0 3,000 Lon SE East EM NW Sco NI SW NE 4,000 Yor 5,000 6,000 7,000 8,000 9,000 Net capital expenditure per worker £ Source: Regional Competitiveness Indicators (excludes financial services and public sector) Note: See data appendix for full data 9 The Five Drivers of Productivity. How much does each one contribute? Causal Analysis of Regional Labour Productivity in the UK (2006) ENRI http://www.erini.ac.uk/Publications/PDF/EriniMon14.pdf 6 5. Measuring investment There are a number of potential measures of investment: Capital stock Capital services Gross fixed capital formation Net capital expenditure per employee 5.1 Capital stock Capital stock is defined as the value of the assets used as inputs into the production process10. This includes, for example, plant and machinery that produce goods and services (including software), the buildings these are produced in and vehicles used to transport them. Measuring the capital stock in an economy is not straight forward. There are challenges in trying to estimate the value of the current stock of machinery, equipment and buildings and how these depreciate over time. Also, there are issues around measuring the value of software and other intangible assets, as well how ‘quality’ is used to assess values (this is a particular issue for ICT - in recent years the cost of buying ICT has declined significantly at the same time as its quality or productive potential has risen. Using just a monetary value would suggest declining ICT investment). Approaches have been developed, however, to attempt to provide internationally comparable indicators of capital stock. This involves measuring an economy’s annual investment spending over a number of years and using standard depreciation rates for different types of asset. There are no capital stock data for Scotland (or the other UK regions) due to a lack of time series capital investment data for service sector businesses 11. Data, though, does exist at the UK level and for a number of OECD countries, although it is a few years old now. The Keil Institute12 has estimated capital stock relative to GDP for 2001 and the IMF has estimated capital stock per unit of labour input for the period 1996-2000 (Figures 4 and 5). Both the IMF data and the Keil Institute data suggest that the UK’s level of capital stock (per worker or relative to GDP) is lower than most other OCED countries – and each if the Arc of Prosperity economies (interestingly, though, the Keil Institute data suggests that Ireland has a low capital stock relative to GDP - this could in part be due to Ireland’s GDP being artificially boosted by the activities of inward investors). 10 ‘Measuring Capital’ (2001) OECD http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/61/57/1876369.pdf 11 Research on Options for the Development of Better Measures of Scottish Productivity, (2006) Scottish Government http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Publications/2007/03/scottishproductivty 12 Database on capital Stocks in OECD Countries, Keil Institute http://www.unikiel.de/ifw/forschung/netcap/netcap.htm 7 Figure 4 Capital stock pe r unit of labour, 1996-2000 (inde x, UK=100) N et G er m an y h e Ita rla ly Be nd lg s i F r um an N ce o D rw en ay m a Ja rk p Fi an nl an d U Ir e S l Sw and ed Ic e n el an Sp d C ain an ad a A N us UK ew t r Ze alia al an d 180 160 140 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 Source: IMF Note: See data appendix for full data Figure 5 % Business sector capital stock as % GDP, 2001 250 200 150 100 50 Po rt N uga or l w Ja a y A p an Au ustr i D stra a Sw en lia itz ma r G erla k er n m d Ic an e y B e l an lg d iu m N F Ital et in y he l a rla nd n S p ds Sw a e in G de re n Fr ece an ce N Ze U al K an d C U an S a Ire da la nd 0 Source: Keil Institute Note: See data appendix for full data 5.2 Capital Services In considering the contribution of capital assets to the production process and productivity growth, it is now generally accepted that it is the value of the outputs produced by the asset (called capital services) that is relevant and not the value of the asset itself (measured by the capital stock)13. Conceptually, capital services reflect a quantity, or physical concept, rather than a value, or price, concept of capital. This helps to address a disadvantage of the standard capital stock measure that does not adequately reflect the shift towards shorter life and more productive investment goods, especially ICT. 13 Measuring Capital, OECD (2001) http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/61/57/1876369.pdf 8 The difference between capital stock and capital services is demonstrated in Figure 6 below. In the late 1990s, the growth of capital services was higher than the capital stock, mainly because ICT started to become a more important part overall investment. The price of ICT fell at the same time as its quality or productive capacity rose, leading to a faster rise in capital services then the value of capital stock. Figure 6 Volume index of net capital stock and capital services, 1980 to 2005, index 1980=100 240 220 Net capital stock (excluding dwellings) 200 Index Capital services 180 160 140 120 100 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 Source: ONS Note: See data appendix for full data Capital services data is only currently available for a small number of countries (and not for Scotland) and shows annual growth rates up to 2001 rather than absolute monetary values. The latest data available suggests that the UK’s performance in terms of capital services growth is mid-table compared to other countries (Figure 7). Figure 7 Volume index of capital services (all assets) 1980=100 350 Canada 300 Japan 250 Italy US 200 UK 150 France 100 Germany Australia 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 50 Source OECD Note: See data appendix for full data 9 5.3 Gross Fixed Capital Formation (GFCF) GFCF is defined as investment in tangible fixed assets such as plant and machinery, ICT and software, transport equipment, dwellings/housing and other buildings and structures (housing is included because it is considered to produce housing services that are consumed by owners and contributes to GDP). It also includes investment in intangible fixed assets (such as intellectual property and patents), improvements to land and the costs associated with the transfer of assets. GFCF data is expressed as an annual expenditure figure and so does not measure the capital stock. In 2005, it is estimated that GFCF in the UK was about £210 billion14, equivalent to approximately 17% of GDP. Data suggests that the UK has the lowest rate of GFCF (expressed as a proportion of GDP) than all OECD countries (Figure 8), and this pattern has been evident for a number of years (over the last 20 years, most Arc of Prosperity countries have outperformed the UK on this measure). As capital stock is built up through investment over a number of years, the UK’s low level of annual GFCF explains its low levels of capital stock. Figure 8 % Gross fixed capital formation as % GDP, 2005 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 Ko re Sp a Ic ain el a Ire nd la Sl nd Au ova st k r N C alia ew z Ze ech al G and re ec Ja e H pa un n Po gar Sw rt y i tz uga er l C lan an d D ad en a m ar k Ita Au ly s Be tria lg i Lu F r um xe an m ce bo Tu urg rk N M ey et e U he xic ni r l o te a n d d S s ta F i te s nl a N nd or w Po ay G la er nd m U ni S an te w y d e K de in n gd om 0 Source: OECD Note: See data appendix for full data 14 Blue Book, National Statistics http://www.statistics.gov.uk/downloads/theme_economy/Blue_Book_2007_web.pdf 10 Figure 9 % Annual gross fixed capital formation as % GDP, UK and Arc of Prosperity Countries 30 28 26 24 Denmark Finland Ireland 22 20 18 Norway UK Iceland 16 14 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 12 10 Source: OECD Note: See data appendix for full data GFCF data is available for each of the UK regions, although the latest analysis is for 200015. This data suggests that GFCF (expressed as a percentage of GVA) in Scotland was marginally above the UK level and ranked fifth out of the twelve UK regions (Figure 10). Over the 1998-2000 period for which data is available, Scotland’s rate of GFCF was consistently above the UK’s (Figure 11). Figure 10 Gross fixed capital formation as % GVA, 2000 % 25 20 15 10 5 ot st land En gl an d L W o n es t M don id la nd s W a N or les th W Yo est rk Ea sh st ire M U id ni la te n d Ki ds ng do m Source: National Statistics Ea Sc W es t t So ut h Ea s st N or th Ea ut h So N Ire la n d 0 Note: See data appendix for full data 15 Regional and sub-regional gross fixed capital formation, (2003) ONS http://www.statistics.gov.uk/articles/economic_trends/ETDecCope.pdf 11 Figure 11 Gross Fixed Capital Formation as % GVA, 1998-2000 % 25 20 Scotland 15 UK 10 5 0 1998 1999 2000 Source: National Statistics Note: See data appendix for full data An alternative and more up-to-date source of GFCF data is available from input output tables produced for the UK16 and Scotland17. Data from this source, however, suggests that over the 1998-2003 period, GFCF as a % of GVA was slightly lower in Scotland than the UK (Figure 12). In 2003 (latest available), Scottish GFCF was estimated to be £13.5 billion. Figure 12 % Gross Fixed Capital Formation as % GVA, 1998-2003 25 20 15 Scotland 10 UK 5 0 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 Source: Scottish Government, National Statistics Note: See data appendix for full data 16 UK Input Output: National Accounts (Office for National Statistics) http://www.statistics.gov.uk/about/methodology_by_theme/inputoutput/ 17 Scottish Input Output Tables (Scottish Government) http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Topics/Statistics/Browse/Economy/Input-Output/Downloads 12 A potential reason for the differences between the data in Figures 11 and 12 is that the data in the former is based on older estimates of GVA and of net capital expenditure (an element of overall GFCF). Regional GFCF data, however, needs to be treated with caution. One of the main data sources for GFCF is net capital expenditure estimates from the Annual Business Inquiry and the robustness of these estimates at the UK regional level has been questioned by the ONS. Capital expenditure is collected at the overall company HQ level, and in the past if a company had units or outlets across a number of regions, its capital expenditure was allocated to these units/outlets on the basis of local employment. The ONS now believe that that the relationship between local employment and local capital expenditure for a company is unreliable, and so have stopped publishing net capital expenditure figures at the regional level18. It is unclear to what extent this affects GFCF estimates for UK regions. If the GFCD data in Figure 12 is accepted as broadly correct, it would appear that the rate of annual investment (GFCF) in Scotland relative to GVA is roughly one percentage point below the level of the UK as a whole - and this suggests the level of Scotland’s capital stock (per worker or relative to GDP) is also likely to be slightly below the UK’s. Therefore, it is not unreasonable to assume that Scotland’s investment performance, like the UK’s, lags many other OECD economies and all the Arc of Prosperity economies. In 2003, Scottish GFCF was £13.5 billion. To match the investment rates (as a percentage of GDP) of the Arc of Prosperity countries in that year, the table below shows how much higher Scotland’s GFCF would have to have been: Table 1: Estimated gap between Scotland’s GFCF rate and the UK/Arc of Prosperity Countries (2003) To match: Required increase in GFCF (£ billion) Ireland £7.1 billion Iceland £4.2 billion Denmark £3.9 billion Finland £2.6 billion Norway £2.1 billion UK £0.9 billion 5.3 Business investment GFCF is made up of three main components – business, government and housing investment. The Department of Business Enterprise & Regulatory Reform’s UK Productivity and Competitiveness Indicators report19 uses business investment as a proportion of GDP to assess the UK’s performance compared to other countries. Data suggests that the UK’s level of business investment lags all other OECD countries for which data is available, a pattern that has been repeated over the last thirty years (Figures 13 and 14). 18 Annual Business Inquiry Background Information (ONS) http://www.statistics.gov.uk/abi/background_info.asp#rce 19 UK Productivity and Competitiveness Indicators, (2006) BERR http://www.berr.gov.uk/files/file28173.pdf 13 Figure 13 % Business investment as % GDP, OECD countries 2005 25 20 15 10 5 0 y y nd ea lia in ce nd ria an rk m al nd a da en ce ico ny d S ds UK la or tra Spa ree rla ust ap ma lgiu It ala orw na ed an ex ma nlan U lan e r i e r K us J en e Ic G i tz A Ze N Ca Sw F M Ger F B he A D w w et e S N N Source: OECD Note: See data appendix for full data Figure 14 % Business investment as a % GDP, UK and Arc of Prosperity countries 25 Iceland 20 15 Denmark Norway Finland 10 UK 5 05 20 03 20 01 20 99 19 97 19 95 19 93 19 91 19 89 19 87 19 19 85 0 Source: OECD (data for Ireland not available) Note: See data appendix for full data 5.3.1 Information and communication technology (ICT) investment ICT investment (defined as IT and communication equipment and software) is a component of overall business investment and is considered by many economists to be a particularly important driver of growth. In the early 1990s, productivity in the US grew rapidly with increased investment in ICT believed to be a major factor. European countries were not able to match this growth in ICT investment or productivity and this suggests businesses in the US have been better at exploiting the opportunities offered by ICT to enhance productivity (Figure 15). 14 Figure 15 % ICT investment as a percentage of GDP, 1980 - 2005 5.0 4.5 4.0 3.5 3.0 2.5 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 0.0 USA Fin Den UK Norway 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 Ireland Source: OECD (no data for Iceland) Note: See data appendix for full data However, the UK’s level of ICT investment may be higher than OECD data suggests. The ONS have recently introduced changes to the way that investment in software is measured and this new approach covers both software purchased from external suppliers, and ‘own account software’ written in-house (the previous approach just included purchases from external suppliers). This has a significant impact on estimates of software investment, raising the value from £8 billion to £21 billion in 2003. This increases the UK’s ICT investment rate to a level similar to the US rate and has the effect of raising the UK’s level of productivity by around 1% (narrowing the UK’s productivity gap with the rest of the G7 by one percentage point20). This though will only slightly narrow the overall gap in business investment with other economies. 5.3.2 Scottish business investment The HM Treasury has used net business capital expenditure as a proportion of GVA to assess business investment performance across UK regions. As noted above, though, these estimates should be treated with caution due to difficulties in allocating capital expenditure within companies which have multiple units/outlets across regions. Also, large, one-off investment decisions by companies can make significant differences to total investment figures in a particular region or year. To go some way towards overcoming the second of these problems, average net capital expenditure for the years 1998 to 2004 can be used (Figure 16). This suggests that Scotland’s performance is on a par with the UK average, but lags in particular the North East, North West (both of which have higher than average manufacturing investment rates) and the South East (with a higher than average service sector investment). 20 Productivity in the UK 6: Progress and new evidence (2006) HM Treasury http://www.hmtreasury.gov.uk/media/6/B/bud06_productivity_513.pdf 15 Figure 16 Investment by manufacturing and service sector businesses as % GVA, average 1998-2004 % 10 8 6 4 2 Lo nd U K on Sc ot la nd W M id la nd So s ut h W es t N Ire la nd W al es E M id la nd s st Ea hi re Yo rk s Ea st t ut h W es So or th N N or th Ea s t 0 Source: BERR Regional Competitiveness and State of the Regions Note: See data appendix for full data Data also suggests that business investment as a proportion of GVA has declined across all regions since 1999 (Figure 17). Its unclear though why this is, although the economic uncertainties following the dot.com crash in 2000 may have been a factor. Figure 17 % Manufacturing and services investment as % GVA, 1999-2001 and 2002-2004 12 Investment (as % GVA) Average 1999-2001 10 Average 2002-2004 8 6 4 2 UK W al es Ea st Sc ot la nd N Ire la nd Yo rk sh Ea ir e st M id la nd s Source: Dept BERR Lo nd on En gl an So d ut h W W es es t tM id la nd s es t W Ea st No rth So ut h No rth Ea st 0 Note: See data appendix for full data Whilst noting data robustness issues, this suggests that business investment in Scotland is roughly on a par with UK levels. This further suggests that Scotland’s business investment rates lag most other OECD economies. 5.3.3 Why is business investment in the UK lower than other countries? The answer to this is not clear, and there does not appear to be a large body of research looking into this issue. Potential reasons that have been suggested include: Economic instability - low levels of business investment in the 1970s and 1980s have been blamed on instability in the economy (there were big fluctuations in inflation, interest rates, 16 exchange rates and growth over this period which made businesses wary of investing)21. However, since the early 1990s the economy has been far more stable so the investment environment should be more conducive. Data measurement issues - investment data largely cover expenditure on tangible items (plant, machinery, etc) and only cover some intangibles such as software, IP and patents – and expenditure on these is thought to be under-recorded. As the UK is a highly service sector orientated economy, some investment that contributes to value add (such as spending on design, reputation building and on human and organisational capital) may be missed in the data. It is estimated that if all spending on intangibles is treated as investment, business investment in the UK in 2004 would have been double the amount using the traditional measurement22. However, the same measurement issues are faced in other countries so this will not account for all the difference in UK versus OECD investment rates. Unattractive rates of return – however, there is no evidence that rates of return are lower in the UK than other countries. Funding pension deficits - although business profitability has been high in recent years, some businesses may have been diverting funds away from investment to and into pension fund to address deficits. The UK’s capital market - compared to many European countries, a higher proportion of UK businesses have their shares listed and actively traded on the stock market, and a higher proportion of these shares are likely to be owned by financial institutions. \it is suggested that management decisions may be more influenced by actions that maximise short term shareholder value, rather than looking to longer term investment strategies 23. Planning regulations - land use issues and planning regulation may be reducing access to profitable investment opportunities for sectors such as the retail and hotel industry. Poor management practices and skills - it has been argued that UK managers fail to adopt best practices and technologies resulting in lower levels of investment24. Given the importance of business investment as a component of overall investment and as an important driver of growth, the lack of research on why the UK performs relatively poorly compared to other countries is a significant evidence gap, as is the lack of robust business investment data for Scotland. 5.4 Government investment Government investment is an important element of the overall capital stock and contributes to productivity principally through the provision of infrastructure. An obvious example is investment in transport infrastructure which can influence productivity through lowering transport costs and widening access to labour and product markets. Recent research by the Centre for Economic Performance suggests that a 10% reduction in average journey times in UK as a result of transport improvements would increase productivity levels by just over 1%, 21 The Puzzle of UK Business Investment, Bank of England (2006) http://www.bankofengland.co.uk/publications/speeches/2006/speech282.pdf 22 Intangible investment and Britain's productivity, Treasury Economic Working Paper No. 1 (2007) http://www.hm-treasury.gov.uk/pbr_csr/documents/pbr_csr07_intangible.cfm 23 UK Investment and the Capital Market, HM Treasury http://www.hmtreasury.gov.uk/media/B/8/260.pdf 24 Driving Productivity and Growth in the UK Economy, McKinsey Global Institute (1998) http://www.mckinsey.com/mgi/reports/pdfs/ukprod/ukprod.pdf 17 and by nearly 2% for areas that enjoy the largest benefits in terms of access to economic mass25. Other types of government investment, such as health, education (buildings, equipment, etc) and housing can affect productivity by contributing to a healthy and skilled workforce – and by increasing the attractiveness of the UK as a location to live, work and invest. However, it should be noted that Government investment on its own is not necessarily a sign of potential productivity growth – any investment needs to efficiently allocated and unsustainable. Data for OECD countries suggests government investment in the UK as a proportion of GDP is below that of most other OECD countries (Figure 18). The UK Productivity and Competitiveness Indicators report concludes that: ‘The relatively low levels of government investment over the last few decades has led to the UK having poorer infrastructure than would otherwise have been the case. This is likely to have increased transport costs, for example, and hence raised the overall costs of doing business in the UK’26. Figure 18 Government investment (capital formation) as % GDP, 2005 % 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 N Ko re a ew Cz e c Ze h al an Ja d pa M n ex i Tu co rk e Sp y ai Fr n an ce N et he U S rla nd s Ita l Ic y el P o and rtu G gal re Sw ece ed F i en nl a N nd or C wa Sw an y itz ada er A u l an st d ra lia D U en K m Be ark l G gium er m a A u ny st ria 0 Source:OECD (data for Ireland not available) Note: See data appendix for full data Directly comparable data on government investment in the UK regions is not available, but regional data on government capital expenditure as a percentage of regional GVA is available (Figure 19). This suggests that the rate of capital expenditure in Scotland is above most other UK regions, and this is likely to be in part due Scotland being geographically larger than other regions with areas of low population density resulting in larger than average capital spending. 25 UK Productivity and Competitiveness Indicators, (BERR) 2006 http://www.berr.gov.uk/files/file28173.pdf 26 UK Productivity and Competitiveness Indicators, (BERR) 2006 http://www.berr.gov.uk/files/file28173.pdf 18 Figure 19 % Government capital expenditure as % GVA, 2005/06 K U Sc N Ire la n d ot la nd W al N or es th E N or ast th W es Lo t nd Yo on rk sh W M ire id l S o and s ut h W E es M t id la nd Ea s s So ter n ut h Ea st 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Source: HM Treasury (PESA) Note: See data appendix for full data 6. Conclusions The importance of investment as a driver of productivity is evident from the wide range of research and data. Although investment data is available for the UK and other OECD economies, there is a lack of data on the level of capital stock for Scotland and the other UK regions, and there are questions over the robustness of other investment data that is available. This prevents a robust analysis of Scotland’s performance for this important driver of economic growth. From the data that is available, Scotland’s investment performance probably lags the UK by a slight margin. The UK’s investment performance, though, lags nearly all other OECD countries across a range of indicators (capital stock, business investment, government investment). It is therefore fairly safe to assume that Scotland’s performance also lags these economies. Scottish Enterprise delivers (or is about to deliver) a range of products and interventions that can contribute to increased investment either directly or indirectly, including: Regional selective assistance - discretionary grants scheme for SMEs in designated areas of Scotland for projects that will create and safeguard employment (in 2006/07 £92 million of RSA grants were approved related to projects with planned capital expenditure of £416 million in future years) Scottish co-investment/other SE funds – provides access to investment capital for SMEs. Innovation support such as SMART and the General R&D Grants – assisting businesses to invest in R&D equipment and machinery Strategic investment plan – supporting investment in buildings and associated infrastructure. The annual ‘investment gap’ between Scotland and the UK is in the region of £1 billion, and the gap with the Arc of Prosperity countries ranged from an estimated £2.1 billion to £7.1 billion in 2003. The challenge is to fully understand why Scotland’s investment performance lags that of other countries, and what organisations such as Scottish Enterprise can do to narrow the gap. 19 Data Appendix Data for Figure 2 Capital stock per unit of labour and GDP per unit of labour (productivity), 1996-2000 Index UK=100 Capital per unit of labour (index, UK=100) GDP per unit of labour (index, UK=100) Australia 99 109 Belgium 154 161 Canada 104 117 Denmark 137 130 Finland 126 119 France 153 142 Germany 171 133 Iceland 114 114 Ireland 124 134 Italy 161 138 Japan 128 101 Netherlands 157 142 New Zealand 94 87 Norway 150 152 Spain 109 102 Sweden 116 116 United Kingdom 100 100 United States 124 142 Note - capital and GDP data are based on 1995 US$ and 1995 purchasing power parities, one unit of labour defined as 2088 hours of work a year Source: IMF http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/scr/2003/cr0347.pdf 20 Data for Figure 3 GVA and net capital expenditure per worker in UK regions, 2004 Capital expenditure per worker (£) Gross Value Add per worker (£) East Midlands 4,681 31,716 East of England 4,344 38,231 London 8,626 84,763 North East 4,538 33,539 North West 5,027 36,950 Northern Ireland 5,007 33,684 Scotland 7,013 35,922 South East 5,655 46,652 South West 4,070 32,736 Wales 3,750 25,988 West Midlands 3,863 36,051 Yorkshire/Humber 4,891 33,629 Source: Dept for Business Enterprise and Regulatory Reform http://217.154.27.195/sd/rci2007/index.asp 21 Data for Figure 4 Capital per unit of labour, 1996-2000 (Index UK=100) Capital per unit of labour 1996-2000 (index UK=100) Germany 171 Italy 161 Netherlands 157 Belgium 154 France 153 Norway 150 Denmark 137 Japan 128 Finland 126 US 124 Ireland 124 Sweden 116 Iceland 114 Spain 109 Canada 104 UK 100 Australia 99 New Zealand 94 Source: IMF http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/scr/2003/cr0347.pdf Note: data uses 1995 $ and purchasing power parities 22 Data for Figure 5 Business sector net capital stock as % GDP, 2001 Business sector net capital stock as % GDP, 2001 Portugal 198 Norway 172 Japan 159 Austria 143 Australia 143 Denmark 143 Switzerland 136 Germany 131 Iceland 131 Belgium 129 Italy 126 Finland 125 Netherlands 123 Spain 122 Sweden 116 Greece 116 France 115 UK 115 N Zealand 110 US 109 Canada 107 Ireland 84 Source: Kier Institute http://www.uni-kiel.de/ifw/forschung/netcap/netcap.htm 23 Data for Figure 6 Volume index of UK net capital stock and capital services, 1980 to 2005 (1980=100) 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 Net capital stock 100 106 123 137 165 193 Capital services 100 108 128 147 191 229 Source: National Statistics http://www.statistics.gov.uk/about/data/guides/productivity/downloads/ProductivityHandbook_ Chapter5.pdf Data for Figure 7 Volume index of capital services (all assets) 1980-2001 (1980=100) 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2001 Canada 100 142 192 234 310 326 Japan 100 131 174 219 267 267 Italy 100 136 186 211 252 262 US 100 120 142 166 219 228 UK 100 118 141 160 201 France 100 116 141 162 184 190 Germany 100 115 132 153 174 179 Australia 100 117 133 144 164 167 Source: OECD http://www.olis.oecd.org/olis/2003doc.nsf/43bb6130e5e86e5fc12569fa005d004c/8b6d471e77 82b046c1256e01005ab375/$FILE/JT00156193.PDF 24 Data for Figure 8 Gross fixed capital formation as % GDP, 2005 Gross fixed capital formation as % GDP, 2005 Korea 29 Spain 29 Iceland 28 Ireland 27 Slovak 27 Australia 27 Czech 25 New Zealand 24 Greece 23 Japan 23 Hungary 23 Portugal 21 Switzerland 21 Canada 21 Denmark 21 Italy 21 Austria 21 Belgium 20 France 20 Luxembourg 20 Turkey 20 Mexico 19 Netherlands 19 United States 19 Finland 19 Norway 19 Poland 18 Germany 17 Sweden 17 United Kingdom 17 25 Source: OECD http://caliban.sourceoecd.org/vl=1813397/cl=31/nw=1/rpsv/factbook/02-02-03.htm Data for Figure 9 Annual gross fixed capital formation as % GDP 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 Denmark 20 20 18 20 21 Finland 25 28 17 19 19 Ireland 18 19 17 24 27 Norway 25 22 20 19 19 UK 18 21 16 17 17 Iceland 22 20 16 23 28 Source OECD http://caliban.sourceoecd.org/vl=1813397/cl=31/nw=1/rpsv/factbook/02-02-03.htm Data for Figure 10 Gross fixed capital formation as % gross value add, UK regions, 2000 Gross fixed capital formation as % GVA, 2000 N Ireland 22.7 South East 21.3 North East 20.8 South West 20.5 Scotland 20.3 East England 19.1 London 18.7 West Midlands 18.2 Wales 18.0 North West 17.6 Yorkshire 17.6 East Midlands 15.4 United Kingdom 19.1 Source: National Statistics http://www.statistics.gov.uk/articles/economic_trends/ETDecCope.pdf 26 Data for Figure 11 Gross Fixed Capital Formation as % GVA, 1998-2000 1998 1999 2000 Scotland % 20.7 20.2 20.3 UK % 19.8 19.3 19.0 Source: National Statistics http://www.statistics.gov.uk/pdfdir/gva1003.pdf Data for Figure 12 Gross Fixed Capital Formation as % GVA, 1998-2003 Scotland % UK % 1998 18.0 19.8 1999 17.4 19.5 2000 18.2 19.2 2001 17.6 18.7 2002 17.8 18.7 2003 17.1 18.1 Source: National Statistics and Scottish Government http://www.statistics.gov.uk/downloads/theme_economy/Input_Output_Analyses_2006_editio n.pdf http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Topics/Statistics/Browse/Economy/Input-Output 27 Data for Figure 13 Business investment as % GDP in OECD countries, 2005 Business investment as % GDP 2005 Iceland 19.7 Korea 18.1 Australia 17.3 Spain 17.2 Greece 15.7 Switzerland 15.4 Austria 15.2 Japan 14.8 Denmark 13.5 Belgium 13.3 Italy 13.2 New Zealand 12.2 Norway 11.9 Canada 11.7 Sweden 11.5 France 10.9 Mexico 10.9 Germany 10.7 Finland 10.6 US 10.2 Netherlands 9.8 UK 9.5 Source: OECD (Dataset: Economic Outlook No 80 - December 2006 - Annual Projections for OECD Countries) 28 Data for Figure 14 Business investment as a % GDP 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 Denmark 13.8 14.1 12.9 13.9 13.5 Finland 15.4 17.2 10.3 11.5 10.6 Iceland 12.6 10.3 7.6 14.7 19.7 Norway 17.0 14.5 13.5 12.7 11.9 United Kingdom 11.9 13.5 10.7 11.9 9.5 Source: OECD (Dataset: Economic Outlook No 80 - December 2006 - Annual Projections for OECD Countries) Data for Figure 15 ICT investment as a % of GDP (%) 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2003 Denmark 1.5 2.4 2.8 3.1 3.4 3.3 Finland 1.4 2.0 2.6 3.4 3.7 3.5 Ireland 0.7 1.2 0.6 1.2 2.3 1.0 United Kingdom 0.8 1.7 2.4 2.9 3.5 2.7 United States 2.0 2.8 2.9 3.4 4.9 3.7 Norway 1.9 2.2 1.7 1.8 2.0 Source: OECD http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/27/37/36396989.xls 29 Data for Figure 16 Investment by manufacturing and service sector businesses as % GVA, average 19982004 Investment by manufacturing and service sector businesses as % GVA, Average 1998-2004 (%) North East 9.3 North West 8.7 South East 8.6 Yorkshire 8.0 East 7.7 London 7.7 Scotland 7.7 W Midlands 7.7 South West 7.6 N Ireland 7.2 Wales 7.1 E Midlands 7.0 UK 7.7 Source: Dept for Business Enterprise and Regulatory Reform http://217.154.27.195/sd/rci2007/rcsor2007.xls 30 Data for Figure 17 Manufacturing and services investment as % GVA in UK regions, 1999-2001 and 20022004 Average 1999-2001 (%) Average 2002-2004 (%) North East 10.6 7.1 South East 9.5 7.6 North West 9.1 7.6 London 8.9 5.9 England 8.7 6.7 South West 8.7 6.5 West Midlands 8.5 6.2 East 8.4 6.7 Scotland 8.1 6.6 N Ireland 8.0 5.9 Yorkshire 7.9 7.8 East Midlands 7.6 5.9 Wales 7.6 5.7 UK 8.5 6.5 Source: Dept for Business Enterprise and Regulatory Reform http://217.154.27.195/sd/rci2007/rcsor2007.xls 31 Data for Figure 18 Government investment as % GDP, OECD countries, 2005 Government investment as % GDP, 2005 (%) Korea 6.1 Czech 5.0 New Zealand 4.9 Japan 4.8 Mexico 4.3 Turkey 4.2 Spain 3.6 France 3.2 US 3.2 Netherlands 3.2 Italy 3.1 Iceland 2.9 Portugal 2.8 Greece 2.7 Sweden 2.7 Finland 2.7 Norway 2.6 Canada 2.5 Switzerland 2.5 Australia 2.1 UK 2.0 Denmark 1.8 Belgium 1.8 Germany 1.3 Austria 1.1 Source: OECD 32 Data for Figure 19 Government capital expenditure in UK regions as % GVA, 2005/06 Government capital expenditure as % GVA N Ireland 5.1 Scotland 4.5 Wales 4.1 North East 3.9 North West 3.8 London 3.5 Yorkshire 3.3 W Midlands 3.1 South West 2.7 E Midlands 2.5 Eastern 2.3 South East 2.3 UK 3.1 Source: HM Treasury (Public Expenditure Statistical Analyses 2007), ONS (Regional GVA) 33