The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Dundee ‘is becoming a less affordable’ city

Tayside cities perform well on jobs growth but house prices rising

- DEREK HEALEY

Dundee is becoming a less affordable place to live and work despite experienci­ng strong jobs growth, a new report has found.

The Demos-PwC Good Growth for Cities Index 2018 found Dundee had joined every other Scottish city in enjoying above average jobs growth relative to the rest of the UK.

The City of Discovery also outperform­ed the wider pack in relation to work-life balance, skills and environmen­t but reported a worrying trend in health, owner occupation and house price to earnings.

The index found Perth finished above the UK average in skills and income distributi­on but fell behind in health.

David Brown, head of government and public sector for PwC in Scotland, said there had been “a clear improvemen­t” for Scotland’s cities.

He said: “As Scotland becomes an increasing­ly popular destinatio­n for foreign direct investment, it is clear that all our cities have something to offer, which can only be good for future economic growth and living standards.”

The full index includes 42 UK cities with a travel-to-work area of at least 250,000 people. However, a number of smaller cities were also analysed, resulting in a separate list of 11 which includes Dundee and and Perth.

The data collected reveals how the region’s largest urban areas performed against the key long-term drivers of growth since the 2008 financial crisis.

Perth finished fourth in a list of the best devolved cities in the UK to live and work, while Dundee took up fifth place on the list, ahead of Glasgow, Belfast, Cardiff and Swansea.

The 42-city index found that Edinburgh and Aberdeen were among the top 10 cities in the UK to live and work, with Glasgow moving up two places to 25.

With a decade of data to draw upon, the report found that across the four nations, England and Scotland had consistent­ly outperform­ed Wales and Northern Ireland since 2013-15. However, the general trend has been for all nations to improve.

The report noted health has continued to be one of the poorest performing variables for Scotland, with all Scottish cities scoring either at or below average.

It is clear all our cities have something to offer which can only be good for future economic growth and living standards.

DAVID BROWN

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