Source · Select Committees · Business and Trade Committee
First Report - Post-pandemic economic growth: Industrial policy in the UK
Business and Trade Committee
HC 385
Published 28 June 2021
Recommendations
2
Para 23
The Government now has an opportunity via its Plan for Growth to deliver a more...
Recommendation
The Government now has an opportunity via its Plan for Growth to deliver a more narrow and focused set of polices than the 142 that emerged from the 2017 strategy. We note that the Industrial Strategy Council’s analysis suggests the …
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Department for Business and Trade
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4
Para 32
Whether labelled Industrial Strategy or Plan for Growth, industrial policy in the UK will require...
Recommendation
Whether labelled Industrial Strategy or Plan for Growth, industrial policy in the UK will require scale and a long-term commitment from Government to be successful. In response to this report the Government should set out: • How it will improve …
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Department for Business and Trade
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8
The abolition of the Industrial Strategy Council removes the opportunity to provide independent analysis over...
Recommendation
The abolition of the Industrial Strategy Council removes the opportunity to provide independent analysis over industrial policy in the long term. The Government must ensure that effective scrutiny is put in place in another form in order to measure outcomes …
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Department for Business and Trade
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15
While we recognise it has chosen not to replicate the Industrial Strategy’s formal structure of...
Recommendation
While we recognise it has chosen not to replicate the Industrial Strategy’s formal structure of Sector Deals, Foundations, and Grand Challenges and missions, the Government should clarify what balance it has sought between vertical, horizontal and mission-led policy in the …
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Department for Business and Trade
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21
Para 85
The Government should maintain sector deals, not least to ensure an appropriate and strategic balance...
Recommendation
The Government should maintain sector deals, not least to ensure an appropriate and strategic balance between vertical and horizontal policy interventions as described in Chapter 3. However, we are concerned that outside the structure of the Industrial Strategy, sector deals …
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Department for Business and Trade
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22
Para 86
In response to this report the Government should set out how it intends to take...
Recommendation
In response to this report the Government should set out how it intends to take forward a sectoral approach to industrial policy. The Government should explain how reprioritisation may be consistent with maintaining the existing deals and whether a coordinated …
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Department for Business and Trade
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23
Para 87
In light of the shocks experienced across the economy and society the Government should establish...
Recommendation
In light of the shocks experienced across the economy and society the Government should establish a plan to review each sector deal to account for the impact Covid-19 has had on employment, pay and productivity.
Department for Business and Trade
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28
Para 107
We conclude that Local Industrial Strategies are useful and should be continued in the future,...
Recommendation
We conclude that Local Industrial Strategies are useful and should be continued in the future, but that the Government should set out how it will ensure that local areas are equipped with the skills, resource and incentives needed to produce …
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Department for Business and Trade
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31
Para 115
The Government should clarify whether a new structure will replace Local Industrial Strategies, or what...
Recommendation
The Government should clarify whether a new structure will replace Local Industrial Strategies, or what form local growth plans will take in future. This would help to ensure a strategic approach can be taken to distributing funding through levelling up …
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Department for Business and Trade
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33
The Government should clarify through what mechanism it intends to incorporate local industrial and economic...
Recommendation
The Government should clarify through what mechanism it intends to incorporate local industrial and economic insights and intelligence into future national-level policies—in particular, into the Plans, Strategies and Reviews listed in the Plan for Growth which the Government has said …
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Department for Business and Trade
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38
Para 151
We recommend that UKRI put in place an action plan which: • sets out how...
Recommendation
We recommend that UKRI put in place an action plan which: • sets out how they will ensure that the ISCF stimulates innovation in all the nations and regions of the UK; • details how UKRI will reverse the trend …
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Department for Business and Trade
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43
British business should be provided with a clear picture of the landscape in which it...
Recommendation
British business should be provided with a clear picture of the landscape in which it will operate in the post-Brexit and post-Covid-19 era. We recommend that the Government publish an overview of the scale and nature of its future relationship …
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Department for Business and Trade
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44
To provide clear direction the Government should present to the House an updated industrial policy...
Recommendation
To provide clear direction the Government should present to the House an updated industrial policy statement which sets out the Government’s strategic assessment of industrial policy in the UK. The Government should provide:(Paragraph 180) • Confirmation of who is leading …
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Department for Business and Trade
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Conclusions (31)
1
Conclusion
Para 22
The economic outlook has been fundamentally altered by the Covid-19 pandemic and by Brexit, and today’s circumstances therefore require a revised focus in industrial policy. However, some of the foundations and long-term challenges that the 2017 strategy sought to address are still relevant today and should be carefully considered in …
3
Conclusion
Para 31
Coordinated and strategic industrial policy is required if the Government is to meet its growth, levelling up and net zero ambitions. It appears that many aspects of the Plan for Growth will be overseen by a cross-cabinet committee chaired by the Prime Minister and the Committee welcomes this opportunity to …
5
Conclusion
Para 39
Abolition of the Industrial Strategy Council suggests that the Government’s commitment to coordinated industrial policy that can withstand and benefit from independent scrutiny has waned. The Council’s abolition risks expanding the gap between Government and the industries that must deliver productivity improvements, economic growth and achieve the UK’s net zero …
6
Conclusion
Para 40
The Secretary of State’s decision to axe the Industrial Strategy Council is difficult to reconcile with his conclusion that the Council did a good job - a conclusion with which we agree. The more challenging context today enhances the necessity of independent oversight. The abolition of the Council is not …
7
Conclusion
Para 41
Abolishing the Industrial Strategy Council was a retrograde step. We are concerned that the Government has disregarded and rejected the benefit of independent long- term analysis and evaluation. Without independent scrutiny implementation of industrial policy will be compromised at best and ineffective at worst. The Council’s analysis and expertise in …
9
Conclusion
Para 50
Uncertainty about the relevance or content of the Industrial Strategy suggests that, in combination, the strategy’s multiple overlapping features made it overly complex and obscured its purpose. The extent to which the strategy’s Foundations and Grand Challenges shaped the day-to-day experience of the business people who participated in our roundtables …
10
Conclusion
Para 51
The UK Government should clarify how the devolved Governments will be involved in the design and delivery of future policies and strategies associated with the Plan for Growth. The UK Government should implement lessons from the devolved Governments’ experience of engaging with the UK Government on policies relating to the …
11
Conclusion
Para 52
In addition to co-production with the Devolved Administrations, the Plan for Growth should be developed with regional and local leaders in England with a focus on promoting local engagement with industrial policy, and not merely a strategy document for consumption in Whitehall.
12
Conclusion
Para 61
Overall, the Industrial Strategy’s blend of horizontal policies with vertical sector- based interventions and a mission-oriented approach offered significant flexibility for policymakers. The mission-based approach helped to provide direction of travel and focus for both the Government and industry on a set of objectives, though 50 Post-pandemic economic growth: Industrial …
13
Conclusion
Para 62
When launched in 2017, the fundamental purpose of the Industrial Strategy was to address poor productivity in the UK, particularly outside of the South East. However, improved productivity was not itself a Grand Challenge or mission of the strategy. This may have contributed to a sense of the Strategy’s complexity …
14
Conclusion
Para 63
We are concerned that the Plan for Growth lacks mission-based structures (beyond references to net zero and levelling up) or formal mechanisms for strategic sectoral engagement and support. The reduced emphasis on these elements lessens the formal complexity of the Plan for Growth compared to the Industrial Strategy, but risks …
16
Conclusion
Para 80
A fundamental flaw of post-2017 industrial policy is that the Industrial Strategy failed to embed itself as touchstone for British industry. Each foundation and mission of the Strategy was appropriate in its own right, but in combination the Industrial Strategy was complex and remote. The ‘opportunistic’ nature of the agreed …
17
Conclusion
Para 81
While some businesses in some sectors were aware of the strategy’s purpose and objectives, for many it was distant, did not provide clear direction nor influence decision making. We would like Government to ensure that future industrial policy is easily understood at the grassroots of British industry and translatable to …
18
Conclusion
Para 82
Sector deals can have a galvanising effect across industries, bringing to bear an industry-wide focus on enhancing skills and advancing research and development. We are mindful, however, that multiple sector deals can spread resources too thinly and that ‘horizontal’ mission focused interventions can be effective across multiple sectors.
19
Conclusion
Para 83
The Secretary of State’s commitment to maintain the existing sector deals does not fully address long-term concerns about the Government’s approach to sectoral policy. Whether the Government intends to refocus and prioritise its sectoral Post-pandemic economic growth: Industrial policy in the UK 51 approach, as suggested in its evidence, remains …
20
Conclusion
Para 84
Each sector deal is different, some are new whilst some established in 2017 built on cross-sector working already in place. There is value in maintaining the sectoral approach—but clear measures of success and failure are required.
24
Conclusion
Government should develop clear ‘defensive’ interventions for sectors going through rapid change, to prepare workers and communities for the loss of jobs and/or businesses that will inevitably occur in their local communities, and to support them in taking advantage of new work and business opportunities. These interventions should be delivered …
25
Conclusion
Para 104
The process of developing Local Industrial Strategies was a useful exercise for many areas, even where no strategy was ultimately agreed with central Government. However, it is unclear what impact they have had in practice at either increasing local growth and productivity, or contributing to specific aims of the national …
26
Conclusion
Para 105
We are concerned that so few local strategies were agreed and published, and at evidence which calls into question the varying ability of local institutional structures to take forward industrial policymaking. Regardless of whether the specific Local Industrial Strategy model is continued, Government should consider the lessons that can be …
27
Conclusion
Para 106
The Local Industrial Strategy model faced key limitations, including: a lack of associated long-term funding that could help unlock local investments; variable local institutional capacity to develop, implement and evaluate local strategies; limited priority and capacity within central Government to support the development of 52 Post-pandemic economic growth: Industrial policy …
29
Conclusion
Para 113
The Government’s recognition of the value of the insights generated through the process of working with local areas to design, and in some cases agree, Local Industrial Strategies is welcome. However, it does not address the fundamental uncertainty regarding the future status of local strategies which are already published, and …
30
Conclusion
Para 114
The process of designing Local Industrial Strategies effectively underpinned strategic conversations about industrial policy at the local level. In particular, the insights and networks they generated among local stakeholders could support the effective use of central Government funding for levelling up and community investment. Discontinuing this underpinning structure could hinder …
32
Conclusion
The paucity of agreed Local Industrial Strategies ultimately limited the contribution of local insights and intelligence into national industrial policy. However, co-creation of industrial policy at local and national level is the right approach and was a strength of the Industrial Strategy. We share the Industrial Strategy Council’s concern that …
34
Conclusion
Para 147
The growth capital gap is a brake on the ability of small businesses to innovate and accelerate their growth. Venture capital in the UK does not always fill the gap and support the right businesses in the right places at the right time. There remains a sectoral and geographic vacuum …
35
Conclusion
Para 148
International investment in British businesses can support growth and is positive on an individual basis. The flow of businesses and IP out of the UK, however, as a consequence of the international venture capital model is cause for concern. The drift towards foreign investment illustrates that scale ups and innovative …
36
Conclusion
Para 149
On this basis, we share the concerns of the Public Accounts Committee (PAC), which called into question the extent to which the Industrial Strategy Challenge Fund (ISCF) supports research-orientated small businesses. Given the scale of the funding attached to the ISCF, the fund should represent a realistic source of alternative …
37
Conclusion
Para 150
We are concerned that the ISCF as a source of public finance should not reinforce the trends seen in access to private finance, in particular venture capital. In addition, we are concerned that difficult approval processes and the challenge of providing finance to satisfy the collaborative approach disincentivise small, innovative …
39
Conclusion
Para 160
The Advanced Research and Invention Agency (ARIA) could provide a mechanism to contract for innovation by driving public-private collaboration and encouraging 54 Post-pandemic economic growth: Industrial policy in the UK competition between commercial organisations to secure alternative sources of investment for growth. We believe that an agency which can take …
40
Conclusion
Para 161
We note the conclusion of the House of Commons Science and Technology Committee that ARIA is a “brand in search of a product” and share concerns that its function remains uncertain. ARIA’s remit and objectives are very broad and we are concerned that its potential should not be diluted by …
41
Conclusion
Para 169
The post-pandemic and post-Brexit environment will provide the Government with an opportunity to reshape how public procurement can be used to drive innovation by British businesses. Whilst there was no appetite amongst witnesses for industrial policy to be used to prop-up failing businesses, beyond support for defensive policy to support …
42
Conclusion
Para 170
Whilst the future of the Grand Challenges is uncertain the fundamental issues which underpinned them remain pertinent. A growing R&D budget channelled through the Industrial Strategy Challenge Fund and the Advanced Research and Invention Agency, in combination with a modification of state aid rules and procurement, has significant potential to …