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THE INVESTOR
businesses start and grow, and encouraging trade
and investment.There is a lot of catching up to do.
Productivity is more than 30% higher in the US than in
the UK,with France and Germany close to US levels.
Perhaps most interesting is what the green paper
says about‘cultivating world-leading sectors’ of the
economy. It aims to develop what it describes as‘sector
deals’with the ambition of ‘addressing regulatory
barriers; promoting competition and innovation;
working together to increase exports; and working
together to commercialise research’.
What sectors could propel the UK forward over the
coming years?Among those chosen for early progress
by the government are the life sciences, ultra-low
emission vehicles, industrial digitalisation, the nuclear
industry and the creative industries.
The government is on more familiar ground when
it highlights the progress made in existing deals for
the automotive and aerospace industries.There has
been an industrial strategy in place here for a number
of years.The emphasis on these sectors will remain,
which is why retaining inward investment by firms
such as Honda,Nissan andToyota, as well as the UK’s
continued involvement in theAirbus consortium,will
be important.To ensure Nissan builds newmodels
in Sunderland, the May government has already
promised that it will fund an InternationalAdvanced
Manufacturing Park next to the carmaker’s factory.
With nearly four-fifths of the economy accounted
for by the service sector
2
, including the City, an
industrial revival would not be enough. So business and
professional services, together with financial services
– the UK is highly competitive in all three – have been
selected for a similar approach that will also lend itself
to newer developments such as financial technology,
or‘fintech’.The government is trying to steer a fine
line between the now-discredited 1970s-style‘picking
winners’ approach and an‘enabling’ strategy that
creates conditions under which businesses can thrive.
Since the referendum,Whitehall has been talking to
B
rexit is under way.
Theresa May’s
government has
embarked on the
formalArticle 50
process of exiting the
EU. It has set out its
ambitions in a white
paper (
The United
Kingdom’s exit from,
and new partnership
with,the European
Union
, February 2017).The question now is whether,
and how, the government can make a success of it.
In the run-up to last June’s referendum, the
official answer to that from the anti-Brexit Cameron
government was clear.A long-term economic impact
assessment by theTreasury concluded that the economy
would shrink by between 3.8% and 7.5% (for the
extremes of a Norwegian-style arrangement and that
of operating underWorldTrade Organisation rules) by
2030 outside the EU
1
. Time and politics have, however,
moved on.The May government is committed to making
Brexit work. In framing new trade deals, the government
will have an opportunity to influence the shape of the
post-Brexit economy. But that also means that trade-
offs may have to be made between the interests of the
many and varied sectors of the economy.
Two official documents capture the government’s
Brexit ambitions: the white paper itself and the
industrial strategy green paper (
Building our Industrial
Strategy
, January 2017).The white paper sets out 12
ambitions, including a smooth and orderly exit, a new
strategic free-trade agreement with the EU, new and
‘ambitious’ trade agreements with the rest of the
world, and control over immigration by EU nationals.
The last commitment, responding to a key element
in the campaign by the‘Leave’ side, is tempered by a
pledge to‘remain an open and tolerant country, one
that recognises the valuable contribution migrants
make to our society and welcomes those with the skills
and expertise to make our nation better still’.
That will be important, as will a pledge that overlaps
with the industrial strategy green paper: that the
UK should remain‘the best place for science and
innovation’ and continue to cooperate closely with
other European countries in those areas. In its industrial
strategy document, this is the first of ‘10 pillars’ that
Greg Clark, the Business Secretary, says are essential
‘to earn a prosperous living in the years ahead’.Among
the other pillars, perhaps unsurprisingly, are developing
skills, upgrading Britain’s infrastructure, helping small
Sources: 1 gov.uk, April 2016; 2 ons.gov.uk, September 2016
Thewhite paper sets out
12 ambitions, including a
smooth and orderly exit
and a strategic free-trade
agreement with the EU




