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UK manufacturing output slips behind France

Recent data shows the UK’s manufacturing sector being starved of investment funds and losing momentum as uncertainty persists surrounding the the UK’s relationship with the EU from next year.

La rédaction de Mediapart

This article is freely available.

Britain’s manufacturing industry has fallen to ninth in the world behind France, reversing a recovery in its performance since the financial crash, reports The Guardian.

The UK’s total manufacturing output stayed ahead of Brazil and Indonesia but slipped below France and remained well adrift of Germany in fourth position and Italy in seventh at the end of 2016.

The figures show a troubling decline in the UK’s international standing after the Brexit vote and emphasises the uphill task of regaining its position of seventh achieved in 2007.

China kept the top spot ahead of the US and Japan while South Korea and India were fifth and sixth respectively.

Recent data shows the UK’s manufacturing sector being starved of investment funds and losing momentum as uncertainty persists surrounding the the UK’s relationship with the EU from next year.

A report in June found that the sector had lost 600,000 jobs in the past ten years to leave it employing fewer than three million workers.

In 2007, the UK supported 3.5 million permanent and temporary manufacturing jobs – more than 12% of all British employment – but by 2016 that had fallen to 2.9m , or 9.2% of total employment, said the GMB trade union, which published the report.

The EEF, the manufacturer’s trade body that published the figures, said the sector “punched above its weight” and was of vital importance to the UK’s economic health. It said workers’ average pay was higher than the national average and that productivity growth remained strong.

A study showed that jobs in the sector paid an average of £32,500, above the national average estimated by the ONS at £27,271, rising to almost £40,000 for a skilled post in a car factory.

Lee Hopley, the chief economist at the EEF, said productivity growth was up by 3.1% since 2012, above the average for all sectors in the economy, and had reached double figures in the electronics industry.

“Our latest data continue to show that UK manufacturing punches above its weight in some vital areas of the economy and contributes more than the sum of its parts. This is reflected regionally, in productivity and pay levels, for millions of people working in the sector,” he said.

Read more of this report from The Guardian.