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Industrial policies, strategy and the UK’s Levelling Up agenda

Industrial policies, strategy and the UK’s Levelling Up agenda
Industrial policies, strategy and the UK’s Levelling Up agenda
In the context of the UK economy’s slow and unbalanced growth, this paper discusses the degree to which recent Conservative Governments in the UK have moved towards the adoption of a strategic and coherent set of industrial policies to enhance economic performance across the country. It starts by outlining the priorities and principles of new forms of industrial strategy which emphasises the importance of cross-sectoral goals, intensive dialogue between government and the private sector, co-ordination between different policies and levels of government, directions to address societal and environmental challenges and the role of place-based policy making. The paper discusses the degree to which these principles have shaped, or been largely absent from, recent industrial policy development in the UK and particularly the interface between industrial and regional policies. It discusses the May Government’s move to set up an Industrial Strategy with a place ‘pillar’ and the influence of a mission approach. It then reviews the Johnson’s Government’s ‘Plan for Growth’ industrial policy agenda, focussing on the recent Levelling Up White Paper and examines how far and in what ways it has embedded these reforming principles. It finds that despite reflecting some of these principles in its rhetoric, the current government programme has substituted innovation and infrastructure policies for an actual industrial strategy, and continues to rely mainly on a top-down and technologically driven type of approach. The agenda lacks the capacity to deliver its levelling up goals due to inadequate funding, an incomplete devolution agenda and insufficiently developed place-based capacities and policies. Future development needs to move the principles from rhetoric into industrial policy direction and design, and to remedy the continuing lack of local and regional collaboration and co-ordination
0269-0942
403-418
Sunley, Peter
a3efb579-965f-4f39-812e-9e07caf15afd
Harris, Jack L.
79ee45b3-27fe-41c0-9fbc-3ae313a453c5
Pike, Andy
1d7239f2-5cb5-4a6c-bab0-114d12aa821c
Harris, Richard
1bc48cba-9c82-4e22-ac46-926d52536cb1
Martin, Ron
57a821e3-2d6f-4422-83bd-bf08fd6c0afa
Evenhuis, Emil
e2a99ef4-960c-4fa2-b87d-359acd804a61
Sunley, Peter
a3efb579-965f-4f39-812e-9e07caf15afd
Harris, Jack L.
79ee45b3-27fe-41c0-9fbc-3ae313a453c5
Pike, Andy
1d7239f2-5cb5-4a6c-bab0-114d12aa821c
Harris, Richard
1bc48cba-9c82-4e22-ac46-926d52536cb1
Martin, Ron
57a821e3-2d6f-4422-83bd-bf08fd6c0afa
Evenhuis, Emil
e2a99ef4-960c-4fa2-b87d-359acd804a61

Sunley, Peter, Harris, Jack L., Pike, Andy, Harris, Richard, Martin, Ron and Evenhuis, Emil (2022) Industrial policies, strategy and the UK’s Levelling Up agenda. Local Economy: The Journal of the Local Economy Policy Unit, 37 (5), 403-418. (doi:10.1177/02690942221149007).

Record type: Article

Abstract

In the context of the UK economy’s slow and unbalanced growth, this paper discusses the degree to which recent Conservative Governments in the UK have moved towards the adoption of a strategic and coherent set of industrial policies to enhance economic performance across the country. It starts by outlining the priorities and principles of new forms of industrial strategy which emphasises the importance of cross-sectoral goals, intensive dialogue between government and the private sector, co-ordination between different policies and levels of government, directions to address societal and environmental challenges and the role of place-based policy making. The paper discusses the degree to which these principles have shaped, or been largely absent from, recent industrial policy development in the UK and particularly the interface between industrial and regional policies. It discusses the May Government’s move to set up an Industrial Strategy with a place ‘pillar’ and the influence of a mission approach. It then reviews the Johnson’s Government’s ‘Plan for Growth’ industrial policy agenda, focussing on the recent Levelling Up White Paper and examines how far and in what ways it has embedded these reforming principles. It finds that despite reflecting some of these principles in its rhetoric, the current government programme has substituted innovation and infrastructure policies for an actual industrial strategy, and continues to rely mainly on a top-down and technologically driven type of approach. The agenda lacks the capacity to deliver its levelling up goals due to inadequate funding, an incomplete devolution agenda and insufficiently developed place-based capacities and policies. Future development needs to move the principles from rhetoric into industrial policy direction and design, and to remedy the continuing lack of local and regional collaboration and co-ordination

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e-pub ahead of print date: 1 August 2022
Published date: 26 December 2022

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 474997
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/474997
ISSN: 0269-0942
PURE UUID: 021e3244-d390-4334-9983-199a7adc50b8
ORCID for Peter Sunley: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4803-5299

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Date deposited: 08 Mar 2023 17:52
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:58

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Contributors

Author: Peter Sunley ORCID iD
Author: Jack L. Harris
Author: Andy Pike
Author: Richard Harris
Author: Ron Martin
Author: Emil Evenhuis

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