Yorkshire Post

Yorkshire has to engineer a manufactur­ing revival

- JohnMills John Mills is an economist, entreprene­ur and author. He has just written his latest book, The Elephant in the Room, published by his think- tank The Institute for Prosperity.

If we want to see a prosperous future for the whole county and more equality between the regions, a manufactur­ing revival is far the best way of getting there.

COVID- 19 HAS not been kind to Yorkshire. Nor, for a long time, has UK economic policy. Too many people feel left behind. They don’t believe that the economy is run in their favour.

Not only in Yorkshire but in other regions in the North, many communitie­s feel discontent­ed with their prospects. They no longer believe that the next generation will be more prosperous than they are.

The big underlying problem is the collapse of UK industry. As late as 1970, almost a third of our national income came from manufactur­ing. Now it is less than 10 per cent.

Yorkshire always depended much more than London and the South East on industry, and the consequenc­e of the decline of most of UK manufactur­ing has been the main reason for the widening prosperity gap.

The figures are stark. Office for National Statistics ( ONS) data shows Yorkshire’s Gross Value Added per head – effectivel­y a measure of average aggregate value created per person – was over 20 per cent below the national average and well under half the figure for London even before the arrival of Covid.

The difference in living standards between London and Yorkshire is less than this as a result of a variety of grants, transfers and subvention­s from the South to the North, but it is still significan­t.

But why isn’t Yorkshire standing on its own feet without these transfers? The answer is that the Yorkshire region does not have enough to sell to the rest of the world to pay its way without them. And the reason for this is deindustri­alisation.

Yorkshire does not have the natural advantages of geography, language, our legal system, and our universiti­es that London- based services have. Instead, it depends on the manufactur­ing industry where straight competitiv­eness is crucial, and it probably always will be.

If Yorkshire is to be as prosperous as the rest of the county, therefore, it has to be competitiv­e enough to engineer a manufactur­ing revival. Can this be done? Yes, but only by a radical change in economic policies.

Thereasonw­hywehavede­industrial­ised to the extent we have is that we have let the exchange rate get far too high for most manufactur­ing to prosper in the UK. It has then become common sense to close down unprofitab­le production here and to import far too much from China and elsewhere.

This is what needs to change. We need to make it at least as profitable to site new manufactur­ing facilities in the UK – and particular­ly in our traditiona­l industrial heartlands – than in China or in Germany.

Indeed, we need to switch our whole economy away from depending on consumptio­n, borrowing and imports, towards being driven by manufactur­ing, investment and exports. Then we can target some really impressive growth figures.

Careful calculatio­ns show that, if we had an exchange rate 20 per cent lower than we have at the moment, the UK economy could grow about two per cent faster cumulative­ly every year compared to what would happen if we carry on as we are. This would make us 20 per cent better off by 2030 than currently seems likely.

Why don’t we do this? It is because too many of our policymake­rs are stuck in the wrong mindset, supporting the wrong priorities.

Globalisat­ion and liberalisa­tion have been a boon for London but much more of a mixed blessing for the UK’s regions, including Yorkshire. A high exchange rate is not a big problem for services because most of them are not very price sensitive. The City likes a strong pound but it’s ruinous for industry.

So, as we fight the uphill battle which is awaiting us on Covid- 19 over the next few months, we need to make sure that we also raise our sights for the future.

Sooner or later, the pandemic will be behind us and we will be able to review our national priorities. If we want to see a prosperous future for the whole county and more equality between the regions, a manufactur­ing revival is far the best way of getting there.

Are we prepared to make the necessary policy changes to get this to happen? Time will tell, but if we don’t, expect the economy only slowly to recover from Covid- 19 and for average disposable incomes in the UK to be quite possibly lower in 2030 than they were in 2019 or even 2007. We may well have a whole generation of wasted years.

A reasonable measure of reindustri­alisation is the only way to avoid an economic, social, political and global disaster like this occurring.

The whole country desperatel­y needs to avoid this outcome, but especially regions like Yorkshire where, for a much more prosperous future, a lot more manufactur­ing is the only realistic solution.

 ?? PICTURE: BEN BIRCHALL/ PA ?? PROSPERITY GAP: The collapse of UK industry has brought a correspond­ing decline in the fortunes of Yorkshire and other regions in the North.
PICTURE: BEN BIRCHALL/ PA PROSPERITY GAP: The collapse of UK industry has brought a correspond­ing decline in the fortunes of Yorkshire and other regions in the North.
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