Birmingham Sectoral Review 2000
The Birmingham Sectoral Review 2000 is the second in a trinity
of publications published by the Birmingham Economic Information Centre
to mark the new millennium. It complements the Birmingham Economic Review
2000 by examining in greater depth the City's key strategic sectors.
The Review is divided into three sections:
- Section One presents
an overview of the changing industrial structure of Birmingham's
economy, highlighting the relative decline of manufacturing and
the growth of services.
- Section Two provides
in-depth profiles of 8 major sectors and identifies the key drivers
of change and future growth prospects to 2010.
- Section Three draws together
some policy implications for sectoral and particularly cluster
development.
Some Key Findings:
- The proportion of the city's employment
base accounted for by Manufacturing has fallen from 44% in 1978
to 19% in 2000. However, manufacturing accounts for
nearly 26% of the city's economic output. Moreover, the BEIC's
Forecasting Model reveals that changes in manufacturing output
have a greater leverage on the overall local economy than any
other sector.
- Birmingham is the Region's principal
Finance and Business Services Centre accounting for
almost 30% of regional output in these services. The sector in
Birmingham employs over 100,000 people with an annual output
of £2.5 bn.
- Employment of Birmingham residents
in the Construction industry has grown steadily since
the end of the 1990-92 recession, from 21,600 in May 1992 to
reach a peak of 26,900 in early 1998.
- Birmingham is a Retail centre of
growing importance with one of Europe's largest city
centre retail regeneration projects, incorporating over 250,000sq
m of modern retail floorspace.
- Birmingham and the West Midlands
are strategically placed for the purposes of Distribution,
with virtually all markets in England accessible by road haulage
within 4 hours. To the East of Birmingham is the 'Golden Triangle'
of distribution, which is wedged between the M1, M6 and M42/A42.
- The Hospitality sector accounts
for 5% of total employment and 3% of local GDP. The
sector involves all forms of short stay accommodation, restaurants,
bars and canteens and catering. It is a very fragmented sector
made up mostly of SMEs and its customer base is very wide, meeting
the needs not only of local residents but also of the burgeoning
tourism industry.
- Transportation issues are very high
on the economic and business agenda in Birmingham
and there is a strategic need for a mass transportation rail
system commensurate with the best in Europe.
- Trends in Telecommunications services
differ between the two main markets. Penetration of
Fixed Lines in the residential market is very high, although
there is potential for growth in the business sector, driven
by telephone selling and new lines for non-voice telephony -
such as fax and data transfer. Cellular Services have been a
major growth area in the latter half of the 1990s and further
growth will follow from the new generation of mobile phones.
- Gas, Electricity and Water are undergoing
major structural and commercial change following privatisation.
Companies in this broad sector account for just under 2% to Birmingham's
total GDP and less than 1% of total employment , but their economic
significance is far greater, due to their enabling role in all
sectors.
- As a City of a million people
and as the regional capital, Birmingham has a concentration of
Government and Other Services within its administrative boundary,
including a significant amount of headquarters activity.
This publication is the second in a trinity of publications
to mark the millennium, the other publications being the Birmingham
Economic Review 2000 and Birmingham Labour Market Assessment
2000.
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