10 December 2008
The UK is in the top tier of manufacturing nations. Innovation, not interest rate cuts will keep us there.
Background
Not a month goes by without the CBI or a similar organisation
putting out a call for a cut in interest rates. Apart from grabbing
headlines what long term effect does it have on the health
of UK industry? Not as much as investment in innovation I
suspect.
Over the last five years UK manufacturing output has
had its ups and downs as industry has dealt with high interest
rates and overseas competition. According to the Office for
National Statistics, manufacturing now accounts for 15% of
theUK economy, down from 40% before WWII. The sector is now
growing at a similar pace to other developed countries and overall
has a record of which I personally feel proud. According to CBI
figures there are 150,000 businesses that manufacture in
the UK, accounting for 60% of UK exports in
2006.
Within the FTSE 100, 21 companies manufacture goods including
pharmaceuticals, machinery and food. Mostly these items are highly
sophisticated, bringing added value, high margins and make
the UK a more prosperous nation in the process.
Why this helps the UK
Manufacturing jobs are increasingly less labour intensive but
rather require higher levels of technical expertise, which is great
for Engineers. Engineering is leading the UK into
manufacturing in areas like cleantech where it can compete
effectively against low-cost economies. All the labour intensive
work in textiles and basic manufacturing has moved to the Far
East due to the very strong competition in terms of labour
costs, however the newer industries are proving surprisingly
resilient.
What's changed?
It has become clear that UK industry and individual
companies have to continue to innovate with new processes and
products, and invest in their businesses. In this continually
changing global environment, some industries like medical devices
and space science are growing, while others like clothing and metal
bashing continue to decline and move to the developing world. I
believe we will find the mix of manufacturing in
the UK will be completely different in ten years time
from how it looks today. I find this incredibly exciting, engineers
will be at the forefront of directing and managing this changing
manufacturing mix.
How do we stay in the top
tier?
Once we accept that no particular industry inherently deserves
to continue in the UK, and that individual industries will be
started in the UK, grow, mature, and maybe eventually move onto
other countries, we can be more rational about our manufacturing
investment decisions as a country. We can operate UK plcs
like a conglomerate which is constantly evaluating which business
units to create, invest in and divest. We can identify future
growth areas and increase education in those sectors, invest to
derive maximum added value for a period during their growth phase.
Finally we can proactively divest businesses where margins are
dropping to lower cost countries and reinvest quickly, retraining
those employees for the new hot spot sectors.
An attitude along these lines in the UK would free us
to create a policy regime that concentrated on industries with high
margins and growth potential, and focussed government policy on
investment, education and taxation. It would lavish dedicated
support on industries with growth attributes, rather than
'manufacturing' in general or a particular industry in decline with
which we have an emotional attachment.
This is the 'creative destruction' that Joseph Schumpeter talked
about all those years ago working on a global industrial scale.
Conclusion
In summary, it is now time for all of us who can influence
industrial policy to start thinking about industry lifecycles and
not just product life cycles - if we intend to keep
the UK in the top six of manufacturing nations.
I work in medical devices and see the continued growth of this
sector and the levels of engineering skill required to develop good
products. I can also foresee industries like industrial automation
and clean technology rising to replace 'old' industries which will
move to lower cost economies when we can no longer compete. I for
one welcome this dynamic environment. We are entering an exciting
period when the industrial landscape of the UK will
change into a more interesting, more technologically dependent age
where Engineers will be leading these businesses from the front,
keeping the UK in the first tier of manufacturing
nations.