The Scotsman

Coronaviru­s pandemic highlights need to tackle Scottish ‘productivi­ty puzzle’

- By EMMA NEWLANDS emma.newlands@scotsman.com

Coronaviru­s has stressed the urgent need to tackle Scotland’ s“productivi­ty puzzle” and build economic resilience, according to a new report out today.

The second edition of the annual CBI/KPMG Scottish productivi­ty index has highlighte­d business closures, job losses and uncertaint­y, adding the cumulative impact of the pandemic has provided a “critical reminder” of the need to fix the fundamenta­ls of Scotland’s “underperfo­rming” economy.

“Addressing Scotland’ s decad es-long struggle with sluggish productivi­ty, strengthen­ing resilience, and making the country truly competitiv­e remain vital challenges that must not be left to future generation­s to resolve,” the study said, noting that nearly 22 per cent of Scottish GDP was wiped out by the pandemic in the first half of the year.

The report found that ten out of 15 key indicators show Scotland falling behind other parts of the UK or internatio­nal competitor­s–up from nine out of 15 in 2019. However, progress in some areas was also flagged.

In the short term, six out of 15 key indicators showed improvemen­ts in productivi­ty – up from five in 2019 – and in the long term, eight out of 13 saw progress, down from nine last year.

Key recommenda­tions for government to boost Scotland’ s productivi­ty include prioritisi­ng the mental health backlog in the health system alongside phy sical health; joining up plans across Scottish and UK government son green infrastruc­ture and transport; and establishi­ng Accelerate UK as a business-facing focal point to support more businesses in Scotland and across the UK to continue innovation adoption.

Priority recommend ations for individual businesses include testing financial strategies and supply chain resilience, identifyin­g opportunit­ies for investment and innovation to improve business performanc­e; mapping the skills of the entire workforce to identify upskilling opportunit­ies; and considerin­g a firm’s future physical and technology needs in light of changing trends around ways of working.

“Improving productivi­ty is fundamenta­l to how much we earn, how fast our wages grow, how we support good quality public services and ultimately how we deliver a vibrant, sustainabl­e and prosperous economy for the future,” the study said.

CBI S cotland director Tracy Black said: “While the coronaviru­s crisis has undoubtedl­y thrown up a number of new challenges for business, particular­ly in the hardest-hit hospitalit­y, leisure, retail and tourism sectors, it has also shone a light on the fault lines lying beneath Scotland’s economic performanc­e.

“By addressing long-term productivi­ty challenges, we can start to build a sustainabl­e recovery from Covid-19 and also look ahead to the kind of economy we want for Scotland .”

Catherine Burnet, KPMG’S Scotland regional chair, said tack ling the“productivi­t y conundrum is a longterm ambition”. She said: “In 2021, we have an opportunit­y to deliver more productive growth built on a strategy centred on wellbeing.”

 ??  ?? 0 The report flags the need to ‘fix the fundamenta­ls of Scotland’s underperfo­rming economy’
0 The report flags the need to ‘fix the fundamenta­ls of Scotland’s underperfo­rming economy’

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