Economic outlook for Greater Manchester

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Commission on Sustainable Development in the South East Going for Growth: comparing the South Easts economic performance What framework and.
Advertisements

Last Gasp John Baker the potential of spatial planning to contribute to air quality.
Workforce conditions & outlook Presented to the Consensus Economic Forecasting Commission January 30, 2014 Glenn Mills Chief Economist Center for Workforce.
Economic Turbulence & Employment Trends Dr. Fragouli Evaggelia (HARVARD, COLUMBIA) Lecturer, University of Athens, Dpt. of Economics & Senior R&D Dpt.
Standing Committee on Finance Sector Analysis 02 July 2014 Esther Mohube 1.
Brazil Economic Outlook and Investment Opportunities Jorge Arbache University of Brasilia BUSBC Meeting, Brasilia, April 28,
London and the UK Economy Duncan Melville Senior Economist, GLA Economics.
IMPLEMENTING CHANGE: A NEW LOCAL AGENDA FOR JOBS AND GROWTH In co-operation with the EU Presidency, Irish Government and Pobal March 2013, Dublin-Kilkenny,
“Jobs, What jobs?” Plenary CESI conference 24 April 2013 Dr Esmond Birnie, chief economist
Greater Manchester Devolution 28 July Greater Manchester is “Officially the most exciting place in the UK” The Guardian, February 2015.
Ivan Perkovic Head of Economic Research South East Economy Update & Potential impact of public sector cuts on the South East (December 2010 Update) January.
Alan Wilson Oxford Economics November 2008 The macroeconomic environment.
Population projections: Uncertainty and the user perspective Presentation to INIsPHO Seminar Newry, 2 December 2008 Tony Dignan.
Greater Manchester Strategy Rebecca Heron and Rod Fawcett GM Integrated Support Team 12 April 2013.
CLOSING THE PROSPERITY GAP KEY POLICY AREAS. THE REGIONAL DIVIDE Greater London GVA- 171% of UK West Wales and Valleys- 72.6% of UK jobs to be created.
Connecting you to the future Assessing “Britain in 2010” (1991): The Economic Projections and Outcomes PSI Conference on “Back to ‘the future’: Assessing.
Measuring Progress towards Green Growth through indicators OECD work UNCEEA Sixth meeting New York, June 2011.
The economy in Wales: position and implications Jonathan Price Chief Economist Welsh Government.
Devolution in Greater Manchester October 2015 Alex Gardiner, New Economy.
© 2015 Grant Thornton UK LLP. All rights reserved. Regional Economy What's the story…. Mike Thomas, Director.
Business Growth: key delivery challenges 30 September, 2015.
The future of labour market in Latvia The future of labour market in Latvia February 27,
Business Support Policy in Greater Manchester Adele Reynolds, Head of Business & Science Policy, New Economy Unlocking a new era of business growth and.
Internationalisation Strategy Refresh Baseline data analysis Research Team Spring 2016.
Women, Work, and the Economy: Macroeconomic Gains from Gender Equity The views expressed in this presentation are those of the authors and should not be.
Sectors Academy: Colorado’s Economic and Demographic Environment Alexandra Hall, Director Dee Funkhouser, Manager Labor Market Information Colorado Department.
MHPP Forum James Shuttleworth Planning and Infrastructure Manager, MCC 9 December 2015 Greater Manchester Spatial Framework.
About color themes Choose the appropriate design theme for your presentation. The first two options on the design tab are correct EY themes, these two.
Scottish Enterprise Denmark’s economy and comparisons with Scotland SE Board performance Committee November 2006.
Ian Williams Director of Economic Growth Darlington – A Growing Economy Monday 9 May 2016.
Inflation Report August 2017
Economic Overview Washington State Examiner School
London, the South East and the East of England outperformed the rest of the UK in 2015 London is clearly the fastest growing part of the UK economy in.
Translating projections into a plan for housing growth
Loudoun County Housing Needs Assessment
Key findings from the Draft LEA
3rd ReNAPRI Conference, Nairobi,
A presentation by Bert Ely June 9, 2016
Inflation Report May 2017 Supply and the labour market.
Economic Overview Barry Naisbitt Chief Economist Economic Analysis
Scotland’s money November: 2016.
The Irish Economy: Prospects in Uncertain Times
Refresh of Strategic Economic Plan
Local Planning and BREXIT
Edmonton’s Economic Outlook
CEDEFOP Session 2: Closer look at the roadmap Potential impacts of Brexit and other macroeconomic issues Production of Skills Supply and Demand Forecasts.
Inflation Report November 2017
Overview of North East Strategic Economic Plan (SEP) and labour market Victoria Sutherland, Senior Economist DurhamWorks LMI Event 20 September 2017.
RSA Insight Report: Supporting Slides
Macroeconomic Context for Budget 2017
RSA Insight Report: Supporting Slides
Impact of Brexit on commissioning and procurement of social care
Introduction to the UK Economy
ECONOMIC OUTLOOK 2018: “SETTING A RECORD” Dr. Michael L. Walden
Regeneration - Enquiry Question 3
RSA Insight Report: Supporting Slides
RSA Insight Report: Supporting Slides
RSA Insight Report: Supporting Slides
RSA Insight Report: Supporting Slides
ECONOMIC OUTLOOK 2018: “THE COSTS OF GROWTH” Dr. Michael L. Walden
Community wealth building in a post-Brexit Britain
REGIONAL COMPETITIVENESS: COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGES AND UNUSED RESOURCES by Vincenzo Spiezia OECD – Territorial Statistics and Indicators Regional and Urban.
RSA Insight Report: Supporting Slides
RSA Insight Report: Supporting Slides
RSA Insight Report: Supporting Slides
Key Cities and the Industrial Strategy
RSA Insight Report: Supporting Slides
RSA Insight Report: Supporting Slides
RSA Insight Report: Supporting Slides
Introduction.
Presentation transcript:

Economic outlook for Greater Manchester Anthony Light alight@oxfordeconomics.com 4th May 2016

Overview The baseline outlook for Greater Manchester Key headlines from GMFM 2015 Comparisons between GMFM 2014 and GMFM 2015 Alternative economic futures Accelerated Growth Scenarios for Greater Manchester BREXIT

Economic Outlook for Greater Manchester (GMFM 2015)

Greater Manchester growth in line with the UK

GVA growth in Devolution Deal areas

147,000 more jobs in Greater Manchester by 2035

Jobs growth supported by rising employment rate

Business services lead job creation…

…and GVA growth

Sector story helps explain local disparities

…but its not all about business services

Job creation will be centred on Manchester

Population growth fuelled by natural change

Changes between GMFM 2015 and GMFM 2014

Most revisions due to new historical data Information included in GMFM 2015 OE global, national and North West outlook November 2015 BRES (revised 2013 and new 2014 data) Mid-year population estimates (new 2014 data) Housing stock, house prices (new 2014) Earnings (revised 2013 and new 2014 data) Resident employment (new 2014 data) Unemployment (new 2014 data and 2015 estimate) Carbon emissions (new 2013 data) Regional GVA (new and revised data available to 2013, move to 2012 prices) Changes to the national/international outlook also matter

Data revisions can be sizeable

Modest downgrade to long term growth…

…fewer jobs reflects data revisions

Larger population due to higher net-migration

Alternative economic futures Accelerated growth scenarios BREXIT

An aspiration for higher growth – the AGS SNPP Greater Manchester aspires to better the baseline forecast The development of a ‘Northern Powerhouse’ - the long term economic plan - provides a helpful framework for understanding what this future might look like The accelerated growth scenario “AGS SNPP” adopts ‘long term economic plan’ growth aspirations and population growth in line with the ONS 2012 projections. These are higher than GMFM Development of the scenario was an iterative process carried out in spring/summer 2015, using GMFM 2014 as the baseline Rather than being a forecast, the AGS SNPP is an illustration of the potential scale and composition of economic growth and demographic development in a high growth scenario

AGS SNPP – key assumptions The North West grows in line with the UK average All sectors grow faster than the baseline, but private services contribute most to additional growth Greater Manchester ‘leads’ rather than ‘follows’ Sector profile of growth and Greater Manchester’s relative strength in these sectors supports above average growth Consistent with local aspirations for stronger economic development Other parts of the North are not as well placed as Greater Manchester to facilitate faster growth AGS SNPP adopts GMFM baseline sector-specific productivity assumptions

AGS SNPP – headline results, 2015-35 Greater Manchester GVA GMFM 2015 2.3% p.a. AGS SNPP 2.8% p.a. GM stronger than UK and narrows the gap with London Greater Manchester jobs GMFM 2015 0.5% p.a. AGS SNPP 0.7% p.a. AGS SNPP provides higher resident employment and increase in commuting Greater Manchester productivity GMFM 2015 1.8% p.a. AGS SNPP 2.1% p.a.

But what if future net-migration is higher? GMFM baseline forecast incorporates OE population projections AGS SNPP incorporates ONS 2012 population projections The main uncertainty regarding demographic growth is the future scale of net migration ONS / AGS SNPP assumes lower net migration to Greater Manchester in the future than has been seen over the last decade We have assessed the impact of an alternative demographic profile for:- Population Economic / employment growth Implications for local infrastructure and policy

Demographic scenario – AGS Higher An alternative population projection incorporating higher migration assumptions was developed by AGMA using POPGROUP model – ‘AGS Higher’ AGS SNPP economic forecast adjusted to account for a larger population Additional people assumed to share the same relationship with the labour market as the existing population (labour market status and sector composition of employment) Population growth 2015-35 GMFM baseline 0.4% p.a. AGS SNPP 0.5% p.a. AGS Higher 0.9% p.a.

AGS Higher – headline results, 2015-35 Greater Manchester GVA GMFM 2015 2.3% p.a. AGS SNPP 2.8% p.a. AGS Higher 3.3% p.a. In AGS Higher, GM grows faster than Greater London and well ahead of the UK average Greater Manchester jobs GMFM 2015 0.5% p.a. AGS SNPP 0.7% p.a. AGS Higher 1.1% p.a.

Implications of accelerated growth scenarios Scenarios are an illustration rather than prediction Faster economic growth, higher employment, more commuting and a larger population have infrastructure implications Transport networks, demand/supply of employment land, housing and energy Education, health, social care and leisure Accelerated growth scenarios assume the majority of additional jobs are taken by local residents who would otherwise not be participating in the labour market Need to ensure they have the relevant skills and opportunities… …if not, accelerated growth can only be accommodated through higher migration and/or commuting

BREXIT

Surveys flag a slowdown in activity… D:\NewChart\UK\Historical\PMI Chart.xls ‘PMI Chart (2)’

…services alone are supporting growth Z:\UK Team\ST_Output\Table.xls ‘Chart1a’

‘Remain’ appears to be the most likely result… Bookmakers’ odds: Remain: 2/5 Leave: 12/5 Implied probability of Brexit = 29% Source: Betfair 27 April Z:\UK Team\Brexit\Brexit Charts.xls ‘Chart6’ http://whatukthinks.org/eu/opinion-polls/poll-of-polls/

…in which case growth should recover in 2016H2

What will be the likely economic impact of BREXIT? Independent study by OE If the public vote to leave the EU, the outcome of trade negotiations and UK policy response will be decisive in determining the long economic term impact Best-case scenario: Britain enters a custom union arrangement with the EU and takes a liberal approach towards migration and business regulation. Loss of 0.1% of GDP by 2030. Worst-case scenario: Britain reverts to most-favoured nation status, aggressively clamps down on migration and undertakes little regulatory reform. Loss of 4% of GDP by 2030

Key points GMFM 2015 sees Greater Manchester growing in line with the UK average over the medium to long term Modest forecast revisions (GVA down, population up) Accelerated growth scenarios illustrate what the scale and composition of growth might look like – and what the implications might be UK growth has slowed in recent quarters – EU referendum likely to be having an impact on confidence / spending but other factors too BREXIT could have a long term economic cost depending on how the Government reacts