The Scotsman

May pledges to spread UK’S wealth more evenly

PM unveils strategy to boost high growth sectors and increase skills

- By PARIS GOURTSOYAN­NIS Westminste­r Correspond­ent

Theresa May has pledged to take an “active role” in the economy in a bid to spread economic growth and jobs more widely around the country in the post-brexit era.

The Prime Minister unveiled an industrial strategy that includes investment in high-growth sectors of the economy and investment in technical education to improve skill levels.

However, the Scottish Government said UK ministers had failed to engage fully on areas where the strategy deals with devolved responsibi­lities and the Prime Minister was accused of reheating already announced funding pledges.

Launching the strategy at her first Cabinet meeting outside London, Mrs May said her government would “step up” to deliver major improvemen­ts in infrastruc­ture and broadband needed to encourage private investment.

The Cabinet met at a science park near Warrington in north-west England to reveal plans for a £556 million boost for the so-called “northern powerhouse”, £170m cash for technical education, and a new emphasis on science, technology, engineerin­g and innovation.

Mrs May said: “This is a very important part of our plan for Britain. This is how we shape a stronger future for the UK and also ensure we are building a fairer Britain and a better Britain.

“One of the themes that underpins what we are doing in the industrial strategy and underpins our plan for Britain, is ensuring we drive growth across the whole of the UK, that we ensure that we are building on the strengths of different parts of our economy and different parts of the UK, and that we see prosperity and opportunit­y spread across the country so everybody has those opportunit­ies to get on in life.

“And you’ll see through the industrial strategy, the pillars that are in here, the importance of issues like infrastruc­ture, skills, ensuring young people have the skills they need for the future, working, looking at the way in which clusters can help to drive economic growth.”

She added: “This is important

anyway, but as we leave the European Union we want to ensure that we are that truly global Britain with an economy that is in the right shape for the future and driving that growth, so that we really do have an economy in the country that works for everyone.”

The document outlines ten key areas for action, including the developmen­t of skills, upgrading infrastruc­ture and delivering affordable energy.

It highlights the difference between productivi­ty output levels in the UK and other large economies, and between different areas of the country.

Scottish businesses and workers have been encouraged to help shape the strategy through a 12-week consultati­on on the proposals.

On a visit to Tennent’s Brewery and its training academy in Glasgow, UK energy minister Jesse Norman said the strategy would build on Scotland’s economic strengths, “creating more opportunit­ies, prosperity and jobs”.

Scottish economy secretary Keith Brown said: “The UK has been lacking a strategic approach to industrial policy for many years and has suffered as a result.

“The need to address that gap is now even more urgent given the huge threat posed by the UK government’s proposed hard Brexit, outside of the world’s biggest single market which jeopardise­s key areas such as university research and attracting talent, which are so vital to our economic future.

“We remain ready to work with UK colleagues to build on our experience for the wider benefit of the UK as a whole. However, there has been a disappoint­ing lack of engagement during the developmen­t of this paper.”

Labour former Cabinet minister Lord Hutton, chairman of the Nuclear Industry Associatio­n, said the move marked a major shift in government outlook.

He told a radio network: “I think, if you look at the last 30 or 40 years, it is, actually, quite a big shift in the thinking of a Conservati­ve government, and is something I really strongly welcome. I think it’s a very significan­t shift.”

But Shadow business secretary Clive Lewis said the announceme­nt was “full of rhetoric and thin on detail”. “From business rates to Brexit, many of businesses’ most pressing concerns are currently going unanswered,” said Mr Lewis.

The latest figures on book ownership highlighti­ng that one in ten homes does not have a single book on the premises sounds on first hearing like yet another dire warning about “Broken Britain”.

But while it can be reassuring to visit a friend and note the cornucopia of reading materials – from novels and history to dictionari­es and maps and well-thumbed children’s books complete with scribbles and pages torn out – it is hugely important to bear in mind that not all learning comes from books.

Literacy and learning are hugely important but there are now so many ways to access informatio­n in the digital age. The internet has opened up countless opportunit­ies and more informatio­n than ever before.

The issue is more about how people chose to receive their informatio­n – PCS, tablets and even smartphone­s can replace the book.

The fellow bus or train passenger may be reading Lewis Grassic Gibbon’s Sunset Song or the latest blockbuste­r on their Kindle, a device custom built to replace books.

The speed of access means the precise informatio­n we require may be far easier to access digitally than in a book. This does not mean people’s curiosity or thirst for knowledge has been quenched, more that we are living in an era where the public expect to have the world at their “digital” fingertips when and where the notion takes them.

Many will argue that nothing can compare to actually holding a book, turning the pages and looking at the illustrati­ons and artwork.

But digital technology has given us an alternativ­e way of doing most of that. We should not get too worked up about statistics on the dearth of books. In many ways these figures only suggest what we should expect.

 ??  ?? 0 Prime Minister Theresa May at Sci-tech Daresbury science park near Warrington yesterday
0 Prime Minister Theresa May at Sci-tech Daresbury science park near Warrington yesterday

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