Skip to main content

The decline of Welsh Manufacturing

Yesterday, I published some new figures on the decline of manufacturing in Wales during the last eleven years of a Labour Government, which showed that the sector contracted by over five per cent between 1997 and 2006, the last year for which figures are available.

In contrast (and surprisingly for some), under the last Conservative government, the sector grew by 31 per cent between 1989 and 1997.

The research also reveals that:

  • 57,400 manufacturing jobs have been lost in Wales since 1997, at a time of a massive increase in the number of employees in the public sector.
  • Manufacturing in Wales was responsible for 28 per cent of GVA (the index which tracks prosperity levels) in 1997 but had fallen to 18 per cent by 2006, the same as business services
  • Key sectors such as hotels and restaurants, so vital to the tourism industry, have also stalled under Labour. During the period 1989-1997, this sector grew by 82 per cent but only by 50 per cent for the period 1997-2006 and their overall contribution to the Welsh economy has remained the same since 1997.
  • The utilities sector in Wales has also declined under Labour. During the period 1989-1997, electricity gas and water supply grew by 32.3 per cent but have declined by 5.6 per cent since 1997.
  • Agriculture has also slumped by 36 per cent during the period 1997-2006, following a small decline during the period 1989-1997.

After much rhetoric, these figures highlight in the starkest possible terms the decline of manufacturing in Wales over the last decade.

I am sure that the usual suspects will hark back to the 1980s and blame the Conservatives for the decline of Welsh manufacturing. However it was during the 1980s and early 1990s that the manufacturing industry, supported by the WDA, encouraged a range of successful inward investments and the establishment of a strong indigenous supply chain to become the envy of other UK regions.

Despite billions of pounds of additional funding for the Welsh business sector being made available from the Treasury and Europe since 1997, the manufacturing sector has received little proper support from governments in London or Cardiff during the last decade.

The warning signs have been there for years - it's just that politicians have conveniently chosen to ignore them.

If Wales is to emerge from the current recession, then the Assembly Government needs to reverse this decline and provide more support for research and development, skills and new process technologies within our manufacturing industry.

If a world-class economy is to be created in Wales, then increased support must be provided to tackle the productivity gap with our global competitors and ensure a high technology, high skills manufacturing industry in Wales.

Comments

Draig said…
Wouldn't say that the decline of our manufacturing is the fault of the Conservatives per se. Might be more accurate to say that "free-trade" policies are a large part of the problem, although it is certainly true that Thatcher did wipe out a large chunk of Wales' manufacturing base - mainly for political reasons.

The more rapid decline after 1997 is interesting, and I would wonder whether it's down to increased outsourcing to Europe by companies that were attracted to Wales by successive Tory and Labour inward investment strategies. This is made easier by large trading blocs like the EU, and NAFTA in North America, where you have the infamous "maquiladoras" on the Mexican side of the border.

And what has replaced these good jobs? Certainly in the Swansea area most of the well-paid manufacturing jobs have been replaced by low-wage service-sector jobs. People have made up the shortfall in income by getting into debt.

There's a lot of talk about Deflation at the moment, but I'd argue that in a number of important respects, we've had deflation - including wage deflation - for years. Although we have a minimum wage, companies have found a way round it via. outsourcing. The net effect is downward pressure on wages.

Labour tacitly understands this, which is why they brought in the minimum wage - to place a floor under declining wage levels as more and more companies outsource.
Anonymous said…
'although it is certainly true that Thatcher did wipe out a large chunk of Wales' manufacturing base - mainly for political reasons.'

Those political reasons being that they were manufacturing things no-one wanted, badly, at prices no-one wanted to pay.
Anonymous said…
It would be very nice to know WHERE you published your figures yesterday, DJE.

Can you give us a link?

However, I would suspect that the decline in Welsh manufacturing jobs and the relative share of manufacturing in our GVA (and probably the agriculture figures too) is a reflection of what's happened in the UK as a whole.

It would be interesting to know how the Welsh decline compares with the rest of the UK. It may well be (I might even put 10p on it) that manufacturing decline is proportionately less in Wales than it has been in the RUK.
Draig said…
ExConwayman said:-

"'although it is certainly true that Thatcher did wipe out a large chunk of Wales' manufacturing base - mainly for political reasons.'

Those political reasons being that they were manufacturing things no-one wanted, badly, at prices no-one wanted to pay."

Well I kinda had Coal in mind - you know, the stuff they're all talking about again because the incompetent UK government squandered our gas reserves...
Anonymous said…
MH
figures out today prove the opposite
Anonymous said…
I'll say the same to you, Valleys Mam, as I said to DJE.

What figures? Please provide a link. Although in your case I would also ask you to clarify what you mean by opposite. Opposite to what?

I'm particularly disappointed that DJE hasn't backed up what he said, because he's shown us that he's quite capable of doing hyperlinks.
apologies but I am currently in the usa with the day job.

here is the link to the GVA data from the national statistics website

http://www.statistics.gov.uk/downloads/theme_economy/PROGRESS_NUTS1.xls

you can examine the industry data from this.
Anonymous said…
Thanks for the GVA figures, DJE. It appears that what you "published" on 20 January was a simply a short press release, for the same figures you mentioned in this blog duly appeared in the Daily Post and Western Mail a couple of days later.

As you haven't provided a source for jobs, I won't comment on that. But the GVA figures for manufacturing bear out exactly what I suspected. These are the figures for manufacturing as a percentage of GVA:

Wales: 1997 = 7974/28760 = 27.72% ... 2006 = 7545/42193 = 17.88%
England: 1997 = 120700/618187 = 19.52% ... 2006 = 128499/985477 = 13.04%
Scotland: 1997 = 13047/61483 = 21.22% ... 2006 = 12992/93361 = 13.92%
NI: 1997 = 3333/16476 = 20.23% ... 2006 = 4119/26787 = 15.38%
UK: 1997 = 150247/724906 = 20.72% ... 2006 = 153155/1147819 = 13.34%

Much the same is true for agriculture, although this is a much smaller sector.
Wales: 1997 = 487/28760 = 1.69% ... 2006 = 312/42193 = 0.74%
UK: 1997 = 10009/724906 = 1.38% ... 2006 = 7869/1147819 = 0.69%

Your intention seems to have been to try and make out that Wales was doing particularly badly, and that the Welsh Government could have done more to reverse it. That was just blatant party political spin.

Wales' manufacturing base was and still is proportionately much stronger than in the RUK. Also, if we take the statistically dodgy path of taking percentages of percentages, the relative decline of manufacturing as a percentage of GVA has been 35.62% in the UK, but in Wales has been 35.49% ... a very rough illustration that the decline in Wales has mirrored what has happened in the UK as a whole. If anything, we've done very slightly better than the RUK.

Now of course nobody is going to deny that it would be good to reverse this decline and aim for a more vibrant manufacturing sector. But since the proportion of manufacturing is in decline in the whole UK, it would surely be fairer and more relevant to aim your criticism for that decline much more at Westminster than the Assembly.

I will not question that the WDA was successful in drawing inward investment and jobs to Wales. But many of those companies simply pulled out when the initial grants and loans ran out, and the jobs they brought disappeared with them. I certainly won't decry the efforts of the people concerned, but it was a short term blip rather than a long term solution. Surely the big question to ask is why that happened.

My answer is that Wales has its hands on relatively few economic levers that could influence the manufacturing sector, or any other wealth producing part of our economy. Just like the WDA before it, the Welsh Government can give money in the form of grants and loans to certain businesses (usually to help them set up) and it has a say in setting business rates. It's like expecting a car to work simply because it has a starter motor. You can't travel any distance with just a starter motor.

The things that would REALLY make a LONG TERM difference to the economy as a whole, such as being able to vary rates of business taxation or setting a minimum wage still belong exclusively to Westminster. The Welsh Government can only tinker at the edges with no power to influence the general economic climate of Wales ... without that power we cannot redress the long term effects of policies from both Labour and the Tories that have (in my view inevitably) resulted in ever more over-centralization.
Anonymous said…
Since 1999, it is the Assembly that has had responsibility and a massive budget for economic development, including supporting manufacturing and has done NOTHING to arrest the decline. It also has responsibility for business rates but they are higher in Wales than in other parts of the UK as the professor has pointed out on numerous times. If welsh politicians cannot use the powers they have already what is the point of giving them more, as many people are finally beginning to realise. This is not party political but plain common sense. Plaid could, as they promised before th last election, abolish rates for many businesses but they have failed to do so. Power corrupts...
Anonymous said…
MH is one of those fantasists that Plaid Cymru throw up with regularity. Because no-one visits his website he has now taken to haunting excellent blogs such as this one with his inanity. The reality is that devolution has done bugger all for the welsh economy and, as the data shows, bugger all for manufacturing. He probably still believes, as his fellow nats do, that independence will bring us untold wealth. It won't. Shame you don't hear anyone from Plaid talking about the success of small independent countries such as Iceland or Ireland any more.
Anonymous said…
Why, thank you for reminding readers about Plaid's manifesto commitments ... even though you choose to misrepresent them. The commitment was to cut business rates by up to half, and to seek the power to reduce corporation tax by up to a third.

I hadn't sought to make a party political point on behalf of Plaid ... my argument was about Wales, and what we in Wales can do together to improve our economic performance. To that end I will happily work with reasonable people from other parties to try and improve Wales, and I'm sure that I'll have a more positive discussion of these issues with the likes of DJE than with the likes of the author of the last two posts.

Plaid were not able to implement those commitments because we did not have a large enough number of AMs to form a government on our own. But if the concept of lower business taxes across the board - rather than being restricted only to limited spending on business development without being able to affect the overall economic climate in Wales - appeals to anyone else reading this, they can vote accordingly.

Popular posts from this blog

THE IMPORTANCE OF FRANCHISING

When we talk about start-ups and entrepreneurship, rarely do we discuss the potential of franchising not only as a way of establishing new ventures in the economy but also as a method of growing existing businesses. According to the British Franchising Association, franchising is the granting of a licence by one person (the franchisor) to another (the franchisee), which entitles the franchisee to own and operate their own business under the brand, systems and proven business model of the franchisor. The franchisee also receives initial training and ongoing support, comprising all the elements necessary to establish a previously untrained person in the business. This enables individuals to start their own businesses without having to develop their own ideas and utilising an existing brand and established market. Of course, whilst each franchise business is owned and operated by the franchisee, the franchisor controls the quality and standards of the way in which the business is

Change your business through change

All business organisations, especially entrepreneurial small firms, must cope with an ever changing business environment. However, small firms have a very limited ability in being able to control and relate to changes in the environment, although this can depend on the context of change. For example, if a major customer changes increases its order, the entrepreneur should be able to predict events and actions with regard to the timing and consequences of such a change and forecast any changes in the required resources and cashflow. Given this, the entrepreneur can undertake rational short-interval planning activity in order to underpin organisational control. However, much of the change facing business today is largely unpredictable in terms of its timing and its consequences. In other words, such change is open-ended, with it often being unclear what is changing or why it is changing. For example, the effect of the 9/11 bombing of the World Trade Centre was largely unexpected and its

THE IMPORTANCE OF THE CREATIVE CLASSES

One of my favourite academic books of the last two decades must be the “Rise of the Creative Classes” by Professor Richard Florida.  This was one of the first detailed studies of the growing group of individuals who use their creativity and mental labour to earn a living and not only included those in arts and entertainment, but also people working in science and technology as well as knowledge-based professions such as healthcare, law, business, and finance.  Fast forward to 2022 and Professor Florida has written an updated report on the creative classes although he and his team now identify a different type of individual who is taking full advantage of the growth in digital platforms, social media, and online marketplaces.  Such ‘creators’ are defined as those who use digital technology to make and publish unique creative content, whether in the form of video, film, art, music, design, text, games, or any other media that audiences can access and respond to.  They also make their mon