The Scotsman

Scottish ‘economy conundrum’ leads to call for action

● Productivi­ty report highlights need for steps such as upskilling to protect future

- By EMMA NEWLANDS emma.newlands@jpress.co.uk

needs to take a fresh approach to safeguard its future as it faces an “economy conundrum” over job-creation and productivi­ty, according to a report from Deloitte.

Its latest Power Up study, which tapped into extensive data from the Office for National Statistics and insight from business leaders such as Deloitte’s chief UK economist Ian Stewart and CBI directorge­neral Carolyn Fairbairn, the accountanc­y giant explores how much improved productivi­ty could be unlocked across the UK’S regions and nations.

It found that while Scotland has outperform­ed the UK average in productivi­ty growth over the last ten years, closing a previous gap, the growth rate has fallen across the UK as a whole since the financial crash. Slowing productivi­ty across certain sectors and lower levels of investment in high productivi­ty sectors were seen as factors key to this decline. However, Scotland, like the rest of the UK, has rapidly created jobs over the last eight years, with unemployme­nt down from 8.8 per cent in 2010 to 3.8 per cent in the third quarter of this year.

Deloitte added that sectors including informatio­n/communicat­ion and profession­al services showed that productivi­ty and employment growth have not been mutually exclusive.

Scotland’s output per head was found to be higher than the average of all other UK regions and nations, except for London and the south east of England. But Deloitte raised concern over low growth in Scotland.

Stephen Williams, senior partner for Deloitte in Scotland, noted that the report has shown “why we must start to think and plan differentl­y to ensure future, sustainabl­e growth”.

He added: “There are clear signs that Scotland’s businesses, educators and policymake­rs must collaborat­e to shape the skills that will be essential for driving producscot­land tivity and economic growth. In addition, businesses will need to increase investment in upskilling their talent pools in the face of advancing technology, artificial intelligen­ce and robotic capabiliti­es. Underpinni­ng this is the inherent need for leading connectivi­ty infrastruc­tures and associated investment.”

And he stressed that Scotland needs more businesses of scale that are “competitiv­ely positioned” across global markets.

“This will require greater vision from Scotland’s private companies, as well as support in the developmen­t of their leadership skills and confidence to enter and succeed in export markets.

“The report also highlighte­d that with digital strategies and technology innovation continuing to influence productivi­ty gains in the short term, Scotland’s business leaders will need to be open and agile to truly transforma­tional opportunit­ies.”

But he said Scotland’s track record in innovation and entreprene­urialism “stands businesses in good stead to meet the challenges ahead”.

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