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King’s Commission on London The Policy Institute at King’s College London February 2016 About the Policy Institute at King’s The Policy Institute at King’s College London acts as a hub, linking insightful research with rapid, relevant policy analysis to stimulate debate, inform and shape policy agendas. Building on King’s central London location at the heart of the global policy conversation, our vision is to enable the translation of academic research into policy and practice by facilitating engagement between academic, business and policy communities around current and future policy needs, both in the UK and globally. We combine the academic excellence of King’s with the connectedness of a think tank and the professionalism of a consultancy. Summary The Policy Institute at King’s College London has established a new twoyear research project on the future challenges and issues facing London and their possible solutions, covering the economic, social, cultural and governmental aspects. The project will take a longer term, 10-15 year perspective. The main planned outcome will be a single publication setting out the results of this work, expected in 2017. This project, entitled The King’s Commission on London, will be directed by Tony Halmos, former Director of Public Relations for the City of London Corporation. The work of the Commission will be overseen and shaped by a panel of high profile figures from academia, business and policy. The panel will be chaired by former Cabinet Minister and current Chair of the National Infrastructure Commission, Lord Adonis, supported by members drawn from King’s and other academic institutions and relevant organisations. We are actively looking to collaborate with a variety of organisations, both to help shape the project, as well as to be core sponsors of the work. We are delighted that the City of London Corporation has already agreed to be one of the sponsors of the work of the Commission. 1 The overall plan for the Commission The King’s Commission on London will analyse some of the principle issues facing London that may threaten its status as a world class city or enhance its future growth and potential. In order to do so, the Commission will not only articulate the nature and scale of these challenges, but also derive a range of viable, evidence-informed policy solutions. It will examine the likely shape of London’s economy in the next decade and evaluate what London will need to do to ensure its continued economic success. However, London faces challenges that go beyond – and perhaps have greater ramifications than – its economic prospects. London faces genuine problems in health, the environment, education, housing, transport, telecommunications, planning and property, and culture. Ambitious in scope and depth, in order to undertake this work we plan to commission relevant research from specialist academics within King’s and from other academic institutions, as well as from think tanks working in this area especially those with a London-specific brief, such as the Centre for London and the new arm of Policy Exchange, Capital City Foundation. Our aim is to draw widely in the thinking of the Commission and avoid duplication with work being undertaken elsewhere. The publication of a final comprehensive report on all the main issues will be informed by a series of papers, discussed and developed by relevant experts at roundtable seminars, conferences and other events, as the work proceeds. This will enable the work to be undertaken in a collaborative nature. We anticipate that the other members of the Commission, in addition to the Chair, Lord Adonis, will be drawn from those within King’s who are carrying out work for the project, together with academics from other institutions who have been invited to collaborate on parts of the Commission’s work. We also plan to invite think tanks who carry out work in the relevant areas. The King’s Commission on London has been established within the Policy Institute at King’s and, although it will be provided with internal resources from both the Policy Institute and King’s more widely, it will also need external funding in order to carry out and complete its work. Including the overall management of the Commission, as well as various events and other individual activities. A variety of organisations are being approached to become core sponsors of the project, enabling them to play an active role in shaping the work, delivering evidence-based research to help assist policymakers in the informed longerterm formulation of policy for London. Leading thinkers (from academia, policy think tanks or commercial consultancies) will be commissioned to write short reports to a pre-set template that sets out: a) historical precedents of the policy domain; b) existing 2 opportunities and threats; and c) three options for 10-15 years’ time horizon in terms of policy formulation, in order to maximise opportunities and mitigate threats. Each of these reports will initially form the basis of a ‘roundtable’ workshop that will occur over half a day and allow a broad set of stakeholders to comment on and shape the analysis. The lead author will then be asked to finalise the draft paper following the roundtable and the various reports will be edited into a single volume for publication. The Policy Institute will deploy its resources to ensure appropriate social media and other engagements are developed around each report/event and to facilitate other activities (such as public debates, Twitter Q&As, etc.). Significant effort and resources will also be invested in relationship building and overall positioning to ensure that there is a significant capacity, amongst the potential recipients, for the ideas generated, thereby increasing its likely long term impact. 3 The focus of the King’s Commission on London The Commission will be organised around different policy areas (described below with examples of what could be covered in each). There are a range of topics that the project could cover, and one of the first tasks will be to discuss and agree these with the panel. Commerce 1. Changing structure of the economy and the labour force The structure of London’s economy has undergone dramatic changes over the last 50 years. In 1961 London was still a major manufacturing city and manufacturing employed a third of the workforce. The docks were still a large employer. Both of these sectors have since largely dissipated: the manufacturing industry now employs just over 3 per cent of the labour force. By comparison, finance and business services (broadly defined) now employ over a third of the labour force. This raises many questions about how to keep this sector thriving and successful, including the implications for labour demand and skill levels. While London attracts a high proportion of graduates and has a highly educated labour force, it also has a high proportion of young people from less advantaged socio-economic backgrounds who face numerous barriers to accessing higher education and, ultimately, future employment. This also has implications and links with immigration and the changing ethnic composition of London. Although it is worth noting the growing prevalence of ‘tech’ start-up companies, particularly in east London, manufacturing is unlikely to reoccupy its former primacy. The key questions, therefore, include the dominance and stability of financial services and related business services, particularly given the growing competition from Singapore, Hong Kong and Shanghai, as well as the continued challenge from New York. 2. Population, immigration and ethnic change The population of London fell steadily from 1939 to 1991. It then began to rise and has risen from a low of 6.5 million in 1991 to over 8.6 million today. Much of this growth has been driven by immigration (both of skilled workers, and less skilled workers and dependents) and subsequent changes in birth rates. The result is that London has become an increasingly diverse city with over a third of the population born abroad and over 40 per cent from ethnic minorities. The growth in population has given rise to a number of challenges. First, and foremost, there is the problem of housing costs and availability as more people compete for a relatively static supply of housing. Second, London has a shortage of school places as numbers of births and school-age children rise. Third, population growth is generating increasing pressure on both the transport system and the health system. In addition, the changing ethnic 4 composition of London has important implications in terms of educational attainment and labour market participation. While some groups have been very successful in terms of educational attainment and labour market position, others have been much less so. 3. Poverty, inequality and welfare Despite being one of the richest cities in Europe, London still has significant groups of people who are economically inactive, unemployed, working on low incomes and receiving a variety of welfare payments. Many are struggling to get by. This is a particular problem with the high cost of housing and transport in the capital. Individual households are in receipt of a wide range of benefits including child benefit and pensions, job seekers’ allowance, disability or incapacity benefits, housing benefits and council tax benefit. Some benefits are very important in London, notably housing benefit which accounts for £6 billion a year in London alone: 25 per cent of the total national bill. This is a direct result of high rents in London and a large number of households that claim this benefit in London have been disproportionately affected by the housing benefit cap and overall welfare benefit cap. These trends are having the effect of squeezing some low income households out of London altogether and raise key questions about where the poor could and should live in London today. 4. Development and planning Development, planning, architecture and design are huge issues in today’s rapidly changing London. The questions of developing brownfield sites, especially for housing, issues surrounding the greenbelt, the planning procedures – including the degree of devolution to London and the relationship between the Mayor and the boroughs– are all part of the debates about appropriate urban design and architecture suitable for a world class city in the 21st century. There are also a number of issues concerning availability of sites for development – both commercially and for housing – determining what type of developments would best fit the needs of the coming decades and making sure that the current planning and related procedures are fit for purpose. Community 5.Education Education is of growing importance in the modern world. It is no longer possible to leave school at 16 and get a worthwhile job with minimal qualifications. London’s rapidly evolving economy requires a constantly changing set of increasingly advanced skills, without which London’s residents risk being left behind in an increasingly competitive job market. If London is to retain its position as a leading finance and business centre, it needs to ensure that it has an appropriately skilled labour force. London is unusual in that it has a rather bifurcated structure of educational attainment with a significant proportion of low achievers and a high proportion of graduates – the highest in Britain. London had a problem of low educational attainment but now, largely because of parts of its ethnic minority population, it has one of the highest in Britain. Nonetheless, there are major disparities in educational access and attainment. This theme would look at the question of how to improve educational standards and attainment across the board, but particularly for disadvantaged 5 groups and in light of recent changes in ‘inner city’ schooling such as the Academies programme and significant investments in poor performing schools. 6.Housing Housing is a key issue in London today. Prices have long been higher in London than elsewhere, but prices and rents have risen strongly over the last 15 years, notwithstanding the financial crisis. As a result, house price to income ratios are higher in London than almost anywhere else in Britain, and affordability has become a large and growing problem. With average prices over £450,000 against average family incomes of £35,000, the result is that many young households are effectively excluded from the owner occupied market and, given the decline in social renting, are forced into private renting. London always had a long history of private renting, but this tenure went into decline after the war and social housing grew to become the largest tenure in inner London by 1981. In several boroughs it took over 50 per cent of all households. Since then it has been in long term decline, partly as a result of right-to-buy and buy-to-let policies. London has become a popular destination for global investors seeking a safe haven for their money, an attractive place to live, and a good return on their investment. Unfortunately, the type of housing often being built currently is not the type of housing needed for lower and middle income groups. London urgently needs to address the question of how to provide significant quantities of affordable housing to enable key workers such as teachers, tube-drivers, nurses and police officers, and others on modest incomes to live in the city. New towns outside London (and the implication of those for London) and new financing models could provide solutions but also pose challenges. 7. Health and wellbeing Health is crucial for the inhabitants of any city. It is also crucial to ensure that London has an efficient and functioning health system which can deal effectively with a variety of needs. This has to go beyond GPs and hospitals to a range of advisory care services. It also has to try to address the fundamental inequalities in health between the richer and poorer areas of the city. Every stop east of Waterloo on the Jubilee Line finds one year shorter life expectancy. In addition, new attention needs to be paid to mental health issues across the capital: is the rise in stress levels and its impact on health properly recognised? Are the mental health facilities and provision what Londoners need? 8. Pollution, air and water quality Today, London tends to take its air quality for granted but the London smogs of the 1950s were akin to the problems facing Beijing today. These were partly solved in London by the Clean Air Act 1956. But more recently attention has been focused on the importance of the microscopic particulates found in diesel emissions. London has been at the forefront of addressing these issues through the low emission zone which now covers a large part of the area within the M25. Plans are also in hand to restrict or penalise diesel vehicle engines with poor efficiency in central London. It is crucial that cities have a supply of fresh, drinkable water and a safe and effective system of sewage disposal. We only have to look back to the London of the 1850s to see the implications of a lack of such basics. Work on the new Thames sewer, costing billions of pounds, is about to begin in an effort to keep water infrastructure up to date. 6 Connectivity 9.Transport Transport is crucial to the efficient functioning of the city and its economy, and the efficient movement of people. London was fortunate in that it was able to put in place one of the earliest subway systems in the world, starting in 1863. There were some suburban extensions in the first part of the 20th century, and the Victoria Line was added in the 1970s, the Docklands Light Railway (DLR) in the 1980s-2000s, and the Jubilee Line extension in the late 1990s. Currently, the major addition of Crossrail is also under construction. With the population growth of the last 10 years and the expected future growth, London’s public transport will, however, continue to burst at the seams. There are plans for a north-south Crossrail 2 but this could take a decade or more to come to fruition. London has aimed to control private car usage in central areas through congestion charging, but the city needs to stay ahead of the game if transport is to keep up with and underpin economic growth. The problems are also shown in the long running debate over additional airport capacity and the issue of future river crossings, especially to the east. 10. Electronic communications Electronic communications provide a vital role in connecting London, both with itself and across the country and the world. The absence of superfast broadband, in particular, in parts of London at present is a major drawback to maintaining its worldwide success. The Commission will aim to investigate the barriers to achieving this and how they can best be removed. Culture 11. London’s culture and the cultural industries Increasingly, visitors are attracted to cities on the basis of the strength of their cultural offerings. London has a large and very strong cultural infrastructure. In addition to its opera, theatre, dance, classical and popular music venues, it has a plethora of world-class museums and galleries which bare comparison with any in the world. It also has a strong cultural industry in terms of radio, TV, film and music production. Add in advertising and the new digital industries in Soho, Hoxton and Shoreditch, and London has a flourishing cultural sector which attracts visitors and also generates a significant share of GDP. Nonetheless, London needs to ensure that it can remain at the forefront as a world culture centre. Other issues There are a number of other issues which the Commission could also usefully cover. These include the needs of London in a system of devolved government across England and the financing of London government; crime and policing, gender and ethnicity, social networking, new big data and data technologies. There is considerable scope and flexibility for individual funders to help shape the additional issues which could be examined. 7 For further information please contact: Tony Halmos MA FRSA Director, Commission on London The Policy Institute at King’s King’s College London First Floor, Virginia Woolf Building 22 Kingsway London WC2B 6LE +44 20 7848 2749 +44 7785 316988 8 www.kcl.ac.uk/sspp/policy-institute @policyatkings