Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Mark Barrow Strategic Director: Development Birmingham City Council Taking the Birmingham economy forward and supporting economic growth Part 1 - Global Scale ! Our position in a changing world ? Population Growth changes Population 10 9 7 6 Populations 1950' 5 Populations 2008' 4 Populations 2050' 3 2 1 1750 La tin Place As ia W or ld US A Am er cia Eu ro pe Ch in a In di a Af r ic a 0 Ja pa n People - Billions 8 Changes in Working-Age (15-64) Population 2005 – 2050, by Continent Continent WAP in 2005 million Asia 2583 3398 814 32% Africa 509 1300 792 156% Latin America+ Caribbean 356 489 132 37% North America 223 274 50 22% 22 30 9 41% Europe 499 384 -114 -23% World 4192 5875 1682 40% Oceania 1 WAP in 2050 million Source: World Population Prospects: The 2006 Revision: Medium Variant: United Nations Change in Change in WAP % million World GDP 60 50 GDP 40 China/India Europe 30 USA Japan 20 10 0 Roman 1880 1980 Time 2010 2030 Workforce comparison ! • The unit cost of 1 English worker = = = = 20 Chinese 18 Indian 10 Latvian 6 Polish • Size of manufacturing workforce – – – – China = G7 combined = USA = UK = 115 m+ 53 m 14 m 2.3m Economic growth projections Only 3.5% of UK exports go to China..? Region 2005 Actual Annual growth 2015 Projected Change Germany 6.8 3.50% 4.8 -2 France 5.9 4.80% 4.7 -1.2 27.3 6.10% 24.5 -2.8 EU24 40 5.50% 34 -6 EFTA 4.6 7.20% 4.6 - Russia 1 27.70% 5.7 4.7 Turkey 0.7 8.80% 0.8 0.1 Other Nr Europe 2.2 4.30% 1.7 -0.5 4 15.30% 8.3 4.3 22.4 7.20% 22.5 0.1 6.7 8.60% 7.6 0.9 29.2 7.60% 30.2 1 China + Hong Kong 3.2 12.50% 5.1 1.9 India 1.1 12.60% 1.8 0.7 Japan 3.3 1.00% 1.8 -1.5 9 6.30% 8.3 -0.7 16.5 7.50% 17 0.5 Africa 3.3 7.30% 3.3 - Australasia 2.4 8.10% 2.6 0.2 100% 7.20% 100% - Other EU24 Near Europe USA Other Americas Americas Other Asia Asia World Breakdown of UK exports by value 80%+ of UK exports to low growth economies ? Excellent international relationships are critical… Example #1 - China The China market (1) • Worlds biggest car market: – Approx 18m new cars sold in China last year – China produces over a 1m cars a month. • Worlds largest mobile phone market: – over 950m + subscribers (20%) – highest internet usage, 500m+ users • Worlds 2nd largest luxury goods market: – China has overtaken the US to become 2nd after Japan. Birmingham adding value in China… • 17m. square foot • Equivalent area of: – Entire City centre office stock – 12 Bullrings • Linking Birmingham Science Park Yingkou City, Lioning, China So what does all this mean for Birmingham and for UK plc ? Our future place in the world ! • First division economy ? • Diminishing global influence ? • Smaller defence force • Maturing traditional consumer markets • Ageing UK population • The burden of the state Tax / pension / health burdens • UK rank within the world economy – 2005 = 4th – 2010 = 7th – 2015 = 11th – 2020 = ? • G7 - G8 - G20 • What will our role and USP be ? How does all this….? • • • • • • • • • Shape how we support and help grow business Inform how we educate tomorrows workforce Affect how we up-skill today’s workforce Influence transport planning & investment Drive investment in digital infrastructure Help us understand what investors may want Affect our plans for investment and development Guide our international civic leadership role Point to opportunities for the people and businesses of Birmingham Taking the Birmingham economy forward and supporting economic growth Part 2 - Local Scale ! Economic strength Economic output by broad sector Economic Performance Share of GVA by industry, 1996-2008 GVA per Head at Current Prices (1998-2008) Average annual change: 4.3% (Birmingham) 25,000 Average growth p.a. (%) Gross Value Added (GVA) measures the contribution to the economy of each individual producer, industry or sector in the UK. 100% 90% 20,000 80% 70% 60% £m 15,000 50% 40% 10,000 30% 20% 5,000 10% 0% 1996 Birmingham West Midlands England • Local GVA is persistently higher than the regional average Source: Office of National Statistics 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 0 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 Public Administration, Education, Health and Other Services Business Services and Finance Distribution, Transport and Communication Construction Production Agriculture, Forestry and Fishing • Declines in the production segment has been replaced through growth in business services and public admin Positive view from investment market Investment market by value of transactions Locating green automotive #1 How are we going to stimulate economic development, create jobs and drive the social agenda ? LEP 2020 Ambitions • 100,000 new jobs • £8.25bn increase in GVA • Key sectors: – Advanced Manufacturing – Business & Financial Services – Clinical research & Med-tech – Creative & Digital – Low Carbon technology – Research & Development – Transport & Building Technologies • Build a world class workforce Local Enterprise Partnership – Private Sector • Andy Street (Chairman) – Managing Director John Lewis Partnership KPMG Midlands Chairman • Nick Bunker – President Kraft Foods & Cadbury, UK & Eire Managing Director Tallent Auto Ops Director, Jaguar Land Rover ex-National Express • Wade Lynn – • David Eastwood – Managing Director Cleone Foods (Island Delights) Vice Chancellor University of Birmingham • Rob Brown – • Paul Heaven – Principal 2 million population • Alan Volkearts – • David Kaye – • Brian Francis – Blue Sky Finance • Steve Hollis – (Vice Chairman) Group Managing Director Roger Bullivant Ltd 9 Local Authority areas 125,000 students Enterprise Zone – Ver. 1. Checkpoint #1 Over the next 15 years across the LEP area… • • • • • Population will grow by Additional households Additional older people Additional (net) jobs needed Additional School places needed 179,000 108,000 84,000 48,000 36,695 Birmingham population issues UK Immigration 43% Asia 35% Europe 22% Rest of World c.33% already UK citizens In 2010 the Net inflow was 245,000 ONS / IPS Birmingham population profile Birmingham Population 2026 ? Population Change Projections Forecast Population Change 2011 - 2026 Chart: Indexed Population Growth 2001 = 100 250 Ethnic Group 200 White 150 100 0 2001 White Indian Caribbean Pakistani African +27,100 Indian +1,800 Total 2006 2011 2016 2021 -95,850 Caribbean Bangladeshi 50 Change 2011 2026 2026 Source: University of Manchester - White and Caribbean populations expected to decline -5,750 Pakistani +77,050 Bangladeshi +15,750 Chinese +4,550 Other +51,500 Total +76,150 - Very strong growth in Pakistani / Bangladeshi population; - Modest Growth in Indian population - Also strong growth (from a low base) in African, Chinese and ‘Other’ ethnic groups (not charted) 3 Skills issues Successful schools… Skills Vital – Competitive Job Market Yet Skills Deficit exists in Birmingham Chart: Working Age Population - % with No Formal Qualifications % 25.0 20.0 15.0 10.0 5.0 0.0 rm Bi 3 7 am h g in l oo p r ve i L r le am te st h s a g e c n ch w tti n e o a N N M Source: ONS Annual Population Survey ds e Le ld ff ie e Sh l to ir s B s nd a l id M t es W U K Skills Vital – Competitive Job Market Chart: 20-24 Year Olds Educated to degree level or higher (NVQ4+) 35.0 30.0 25.0 20.0 15.0 10.0 5.0 Source: ONS Annual Population Survey tM id l K U an d s to l W es ca ew N Br is st le oo l Li ve rp s Le ed Sh ef fi te r M an ch es ha m Bi rm in g am ng h ot ti el d 0.0 N % Income Relatively low household income 18,000 16,000 14,000 GDHI per Head at 2009 Prices (1996-2009) 12,000 10,000 8,000 6,000 4,000 2,000 Average annual change: 3.4% (Birmingham) Birmingham West Midlands 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 0 England Gross disposable household income (GDHI) represents the amounts of money individuals have available to spend on goods and services, to save or invest. • Household income growing at a positive 3.4% p.a Source: Office of National Statistics Employment LEP Unemployment trend Employment by ethnicity 16-64 yr population – males Male 16-64 yr Employment Rate by Ethnic Group Highest Employment rates for the city are experienced by Indian males (73%) 100% Not Employed 90% Employed 80% 70% 60% 50% This is in contrast with the Pakistani / Bangladeshi male rate of 56%. 40% 30% 20% Source: Annual Population Survey 10% Note: Pakistani category = Pakistani & Bangladeshi 0% Indian Mixed White Black Pakistani Other White Male rate in Birmingham (71%) is still below the national figures for this group (76%). 4 Employment by ethnicity 16-64 yr population – females Female employment rates differ sharply by ethnic group. Especially in comparison to the male rates. Female 16-64 yr Employment Rate by Ethnic Group Not Employed 100% Employed 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% Pakistani / Bangladeshi rate is very low – with just over a quarter of working age women in employment (27.9%) 30% 20% Source: Annual Population Survey Note:10% Pakistani category = Pakistani & Bangladeshi 0% Mixed White Black The Indian female employment rate is below the average (as opposed to the male rate). Indian Pakistani Other 4 Predicted Population Change 2011-26 - Working Age 16-64 60 (000,s) 50 Change ('000s) 40 30 Birmingham 10 0 -10 +48 Birmingham +52 Solihull Solihull +3 Lichfield Lichfield +1 Bromsgrove Bromsgrove +1 Tamworth East Staffordshire +1 Redditch Cannock Chase -1 Wyre Forest Tamworth -2 Redditch -3 Wyre Forest -3 East Staffordshire 20 LEP Cannock Chase Enterprise A city of entrepreneurs GEM Apps 2009 early stage entrepreneural ctivity Gem Survey 2010 Investing in Connectivity A connected and smart city SMART CITY Tele-healthcare Traffic routing & parking Birmingham “Oyster” Card Smartphone app’s Smart energy grid On demand learning Smart buildings 4G Network 100mb Ultrafast Broadband Using our buildings/highway assets A Smart City A Sustainable City “Greenprint” • Increasing access to finance for green investment • Increasing energy & water efficiency • Reducing carbon emissions • Growing green tech companies • Commercialising R&D • Developing a base of green industry talent the money bit … Example investments… • • • • • • • • • • Airport expansion Eastside & Snow Hill Enterprise Zone Green housing retrofit Highway/Lighting PFI John Lewis Library of Birmingham Midland Metro New Street Station £ £ £ £ £ £ £ £ £ 125m 300m 875m* 100m 2,700m 100m 190m 125m 630m High Speed 2 £ 1,500m * £ 6,520m • Total EXAMPLE #1 SOME NEW FINANCIAL TOOLS • Tax Incremental Financing (TIF) • Retention of local business rates ? • Maximising & leveraging EU Funding • Regional Growth Fund • Sector Thematic B.I.D’s • New Homes Bonus • Social Impact Bonds • Community Based Budgets EXAMPLE #2 • Marketing & Business Birmingham • Finance Birmingham (£10m loan + £10m Equity) • Consolidating business advice & support – “Business Hub” • Developing a ‘Supplier Park’ Offer for green and advanced manufacturing • Science Park without walls • Support programmes for entrepreneurs & first time business • Creating a global profile & forming strong relationships SUPPORTING BUSINESS We will…. • set in place a globally competitive business climate • be home to more world class industry clusters • accelerate investment in strategic transport & digital infrastructure • be a global leader in sustainability • provide regional/national leadership • enable & maintain a high quality of life • be the easiest place in the UK to do business Please boast about Birmingham ! Thank you ! [email protected]