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MS reacts to report about Wales' economic position
MS reacts to report about Wales' economic position

Leader Live

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • Leader Live

MS reacts to report about Wales' economic position

MS for North Wales A new report has revealed that Wales ranks lowest in a comparative assessment of economic competitiveness across the regions of England and Wales. The NICE Index (Networks, Innovation, Creativity and Entrepreneurship), developed by Professor Robert Huggins (Cardiff University) and Professor Piers Thompson (Nottingham Trent University), paints a troubling picture of Wales's economic position. The report places Wales below every English region, with many Welsh local authorities languishing at the foot of the league table. Prof Huggins said: 'Unfortunately, Wales remains economically cut off from many parts of the rest of the UK, indicating that despite some positive policy developments there is still much to do. "Our findings reveal that Welsh communities are not just struggling with physical infrastructure deficits in terms of transport and housing, they're suffering from profound behavioural barriers that prevent them from creating the networks, innovation, and entrepreneurial cultures essential for modern economic success.' He added: "We're not dealing with a simple infrastructure problem that can be solved by building roads or broadband networks, Welsh communities need behavioural interventions that help people rebuild confidence, create networks, and develop entrepreneurial cultures. "The UK Government has recently launched a new industrial strategy, and while this may produce some benefits for parts of Wales it will not address these more fundamental behavioural challenges." The report confirms what Welsh Conservatives have long stated, that under Labour our economy is broken in Wales and the only way it can fixed is by creating a Wales that is open for business. To achieve this, we would remove the regulatory stranglehold on our economy by overhauling the current business rates system, abolish rates for small businesses to revitalise our town centres, and axe the damaging Tourism tax. Meanwhile, another report, this time by the Bevan Foundation, has revealed that high childcare costs in Wales are pushing more families into poverty and out of work. The report concluded that the soaring cost of childcare is beyond the reach of many, with some families now limiting the number of children they are having due to costs. The UK Government has outlined proposals that by September 2025 it will extend 30 hours of free childcare to eligible working parents, for every child over the age of 9 months. It is disappointing that the Welsh Labour Government has not made this same commitment, despite receiving additional funding from the UK Government to match this – they should be supporting Welsh parents to stay in work and contribute to their communities. For help, email or call 0300 200 7219.

Wales lagging behind England in one key metric, new report shows
Wales lagging behind England in one key metric, new report shows

Wales Online

time06-08-2025

  • Business
  • Wales Online

Wales lagging behind England in one key metric, new report shows

Wales lagging behind England in one key metric, new report shows A new measure of economic competitiveness across Wales and England has been devised by Professors Robert Huggins and Piers Thompson Wales has the lowest ranking in a new assessment of economic competitiveness that also covers the regions of England (Image: Getty Images) Wales has the lowest ranking in a new assessment of economic competitiveness that also covers the regions of England with many of its local authorities languishing at the foot of the league table. ‌ The challenges facing the Welsh economy, with many of its communities described as being "innovation deserts", are highlighted in a report from Professor Robert Huggins of the School of Geography and Planning at Cardiff University and Professor Piers Thompson of Nottingham Business School at Nottingham Trent University, which builds on their long-standing and respected UK economic competitiveness index research. ‌ Their latest work, Economic Possibilities Across England and Wales: the NICE index of localities and regions, determines ranking on the combined measures of networks - that includes estimated ties between businesses within and outside a region and their research and development intensity - innovation, creativity and entrepreneurship (NICE). ‌ Wales is below all the regions of England assessed, which sees London ranked top followed by the south east of England. The 330 local authority areas in England and Wales were also scored on the NICE measure with Merthyr Tydfil ranked bottom, Blaenau Gwent 328th and Anglesey 325th. The highest ranked Welsh local authority is Cardiff, ranked 62nd (with a positive NICE score of 0.28) followed by Monmouthshire ranked 100th (00.7). Flintshire is the next highest at 125th. but with a NICE negative score of 0.02). Newport is ranked 239th and Swansea 176th. ‌ The authors of the report said the prominence of Welsh communities among the struggling areas reflects "systemic challenges in developing foundational economic capacities." They also warn that the UK Government's new industrial strategy risks reinforcing existing disparities by ignoring the specific challenges facing Welsh localities. The report says that schools and lifelong learning institutions must integrate creative and entrepreneurial curricula alongside teacher development programmes to nurture the "psychological resources necessary for network participation, imaginative risk-taking, innovative thinking, and venture creation across all age groups." ‌ Prof Robert Huggins. (Image: Western Mail) Prof Huggins said: 'Unfortunately, Wales remains economically cut off from many parts of the rest of the UK, indicating that despite some positive policy developments there is still much to do. "Our findings reveal that Welsh communities are not just struggling with physical infrastructure deficits in terms of transport and housing, they're suffering from profound behavioural barriers that prevent them from creating the networks, innovation, and entrepreneurial cultures essential for modern economic success.' ‌ The study identifies particularly severe deficits for Wales across networks where it is ranked 10th and lowest alongside the English regions, innovation (10th), and entrepreneurship (ranking 9th). Only in creativity does Wales show marginally better performance with a ranking of 7th. The report describes large parts of Wales as being "innovation deserts" with severely limited entrepreneurial ecosystems, weak business networks, and constrained access to creative infrastructure. The report adds that these deserts create barriers to economic renewal, cutting Welsh communities off from the knowledge flows and collaboration opportunities that drive modern prosperity. It adds that post-industrial Welsh towns have become trapped in cycles where historical narratives of decline become self-fulfilling prophecies, limiting residents' ability to envision and create new economic possibilities. ‌ Prof Huggins said: "Wales possesses significant creative and cultural assets that should be driving innovation and entrepreneurship, but communities like Merthyr Tydfil and Blaenau Gwent have developed what we term self-limiting mindsets, rooted in narratives of decline, that prevent residents from building the networks and entrepreneurial cultures that could transform their economic prospects. In essence, they have become disconnected from economic opportunity." He added: "We're not dealing with a simple infrastructure problem that can be solved by building roads or broadband networks, Welsh communities need behavioural interventions that help people rebuild confidence, create networks, and develop entrepreneurial cultures. "The UK Government has recently launched a new industrial strategy, and while this may produce some benefits for parts of Wales it will not address these more fundamental behavioural challenges." ‌ The study said there is a strong correlation between the NICE index scores and the key economic measure of gross value added per capital, highlighting that networks, innovation, creativity, and entrepreneurship serve as foundational conditions for wealth generation. The report says that this provides evidence that Wales's economic under performance stems directly from its failure to develop these. Prof Huggins said: "Wales needs a long-term plan to harness its future economic possibilities through sustained investment in building the human networks and entrepreneurial cultures that can break cycles of decline. "This means community-level interventions that help people develop business connections, innovation programmes that build on Wales's creative strengths, and entrepreneurship support that tackles the behavioural barriers preventing people from starting businesses. Clearly, there are pockets of success particularly in part of Cardiff and our other cities, but these need to become far more widespread." ‌ The study recommends that the recently established Council of the Nations and Regions should help coordinate targeted investment specifically addressing behavioural change rather than just traditional infrastructure. This includes redesigning choice architecture to encourage entrepreneurship, building forward-looking narratives that highlight local successes rather than historical failures, and creating dense networks of collaboration. Prof Huggins said: "Without urgent action to address these foundational deficits, Wales risks becoming permanently economically isolated from UK prosperity, with further devastating consequences for Welsh communities and national economic performance." Scotland and Northern Ireland are not included due to a lack of comparative data. Article continues below

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