Business First Summer 2017 Business First Magazine Summer 2017 | Page 26

THOUGHT LEADERSHIP Regional Productivity Growth in Northern Ireland: Unlocking our Economic Potential T by Angela McGowan, CBI Northern Ireland Director he CBI recently published a report Unlocking Regional Growth: Understanding the Drivers of Productivity across the UK’s Regions and Nations, focussing on the role that improving regional growth can play in boosting the UK economy. In total, the report found that there was a potential £208bn prize to be had for unlocking higher regional productivity across the board – equivalent to a 10 per cent increase in the size of the UK economy. Attempts to understand the geographic drivers of productivity growth and how to mitigate large differences are nothing new. We have witnessed the rise of the Northern Powerhouse and, in his most recent Autumn Statement, the Chancellor set out to tackle regional imbalances by pursuing an industrial strategy fuelled by infrastructure and support for innovation. We saw this approach again mirrored in Northern Ireland when the Minister for the Economy published Economy 2030: A draft industrial strategy for Northern Ireland in one of his last acts before the local Executive collapsed. Some of the statistics outlined in Unlocking Regional Growth will give business and political leaders in Northern Ireland pause for thought. Overall, Northern Ireland ranks among the lowest grouping of UK regions and devolved nations for productivity performance and was the only region or devolved nation which witnessed a slight decline in productivity from 2007 to 2014. Similarly, Northern Ireland’s average regional productivity was the lowest of all devolved nations and English regions measured by the CBI. While this may suggest a pessimistic overall picture, we know that there is also much to celebrate in the Northern Irish economy. We must recognise how far we have come in such a short time. Peace and stability now taken for granted have prevailed for two decades and the double­digit unemployment suffered in the 1980s is a distant memory. We are a small economy now lauded for our food and culture, our film and television output and our capacity to host major international events. We have a diverse economy with sectors like agri­food, cyber security, fin­tech, manufacturing and services all flourishing, gaining acclaim and building an international profile. Improving productivity can help to take us to the next level. Productivity gains boost 24 www.businessfirstonline.co.uk wages, improve living standards and present new business opportunities. Indeed, the regional growth figures are not all doom and gloom – there are grounds for cautious optimism. In headline productivity growth, Northern Ireland consistently outperformed Wales over the 2000­14 period. While there are good news stories in the Northern Irish economy, improving regional growth and securing a share of that £208bn productivity growth prize would undoubtedly be very welcome. Four drivers of regional growth In Unlocking Regional Growth, the CBI provides a blueprint for boosting regional growth by outlining four key drivers of regional productivity difference across the UK. The four drivers are as follows: 1. Educational attainment of young people at 16 and skills. 2. Transport links that widen access to labour. 3. Improved management practices. 4. Raising the proportion of firms that innovate and export. These are the key areas policymakers and business leaders need to focus on if they want to create the kind of sustainable, inclusive growth we need to create future prosperity. It is also the only way that we can meet the challenge set out by the Northern Irish Executive to be one of the Top 3 most competitive small advanced economies in the world. While there is undoubtedly great political will to achieve better regional growth, there is an irony that instability in the political arena might make this more challenging that we had otherwise hoped. A General Election which was intended to create stability over Brexit has arguably created even more instability by returning a minority Conservative Government. Against the backdrop of Brexit, with its heightened impact upon the Northern Ireland economy, and in the absence of a fully functioning Executive, business leaders are right to be circumspect about the kind of political leadership they can count on. For Northern Ireland to fire on all cylinders, raise its productivity and raise our levels of economic growth, we desperately need for policy makers and business leaders to work together. That means Westminster, a newly functioning Executive and the business community all playing their role. Productivity affects wages, living standards, opportunities and prosperity – we owe it to future generations to start making progress on critical issues now. We need to show the world that Northern Ireland is an open and innovative economy, that it is safe destination for investment and can provide a high standard of living for its citizens.