Thursday, 16 March 2017

Combination of learning journal 2/3 due to technical issue of submission.

Learning Journal #2

Kasim Shah, Elizabeth Owusu-Darko & Tanjinna Miah

Q. Assess the policy options for investing in the UK's Care infrastructure viable?

Background: Tanjinna
Current Problem: Elizabeth
Cost benefit Analysis/ Economic Viability - Kasim
Exec Summary / Conclusion – Tanjinna, Elizabeth & Kasim

Following last week, we as a group have kept in contact regarding collection of background research. Post meeting the essay is becoming more specific with me directly focused on the strengths, weaknesses and analysis of the sure start policy, with a late arrival to the group, Tanjinna Miah has been assigned her role which will consist of the majority of the background research in the next two weeks in to the policy of sure start plus with her regularly contacting other members of the group of key research found. Finally, Elizabeth has been developing her segment of the essay so by next week we will be giving each other first drafts of our paragraphs to see how they link together to form one coherent report. We have decided as a group to write the bulk of this essay and in the final two/three weeks come together and form the introduction and conclusion.



Learning Journal 3

Meeting Date: Tuesday 6th March , Present - Kasim Shah , Elizabeth Owusu-Darko

Planned Kasim's paragraph in further detail by answering any questions about what to include and decided to split the cost benefit analysis into viability and usefulness addressing key areas of overworking of personal advisers and lack of ethnic minorities involved in the program.

My paragraph was linked successfully into his and adding clearer detail about the role of the personal adviser and why they are able to address the issue of teenage pregnancy. We planned to summarise the cost benefit analysis in the conc and give a clear answer to the question.

A deadline was set for midday 9th March for everyone's final draft ( received from Kasim) so that over the weekend Elizabeth will work on smoothing out the different voice narratives into coherent report.

The Exec summary will be outlined after with a full report being sent to all members to iron/fine tune the report this will be done until all members are satisfied and the report submitted 

Monday, 13 March 2017



What is the gender impact of the Budget 2017?

 This involves using gender as a macroeconomic variable to review the UK Autumn Statement 2016 or the 2017 Budget  and assess its gendered outcomes. 

For this assignment I will research into the 2017 Budget and assess how this affects gender. I will start by comparing past budgets and considering their gender impacts. 

First I will consider the macroeconomic variables that influence gender. I will look deeply into areas such as class, sex and race and see how these different factors are affected by the budget. 

Next I will consider inequalities based on gender such as findings in the 2016 report from the HOC library. 

I will also look into the areas that the budget funds, such as education, infrastructure, health, defence, and environment. 

Sunday, 12 March 2017

Learning Journal 3. Group J

Meeting 2nd March at Warmington Tower
Present: Abida, Padraig, Tima

The aim for this meeting was to look over our minimum 500 words each for our sections of the report and make sure we were all heading in the same direction.
Padraig and I did around 600 words each, for the 'background' and 'diagnosis' and we made sure that we did not repeat/contradict each other in what we had written so far.
We helped Tima develop some of her notes for 'long-term reforms'. The majority of this meeting was spent solidifying what Tima should include in her section, we decided that education and the media would be the focal point on how to reform the current vegan movement.
-Education: info about veganism as a lifestyle choice and how it can reduce GHG emissions should be incorporated into subjects such as PSHE, Science and Geography.
-Media: govt money to be spent on advertisements/documentaries/social media campaigns to get the word out there about how harmful the production of animal products is. The media plays an integral force in shaping people's minds, thus if the campaigns are carried out effectively, eventually individuals will be encouraged to become vegan. In time, this will lead to a larger scale structural change.


Meeting March 10th
We met at the library from 3-6pm

The day before was the FINAL FINAL internal deadline for all of us to send our completed sections to Padraig so that he could collate it before we met on Friday. The aim of the meeting was to write the executive summary and the conclusion, as a collective. Instead, we continued to redraft the sections as a lot of it sounded out of place, especially once put with the whole report. We also fixed up spelling and grammar and general sentence coherency and the bibliographies as best as we could with what each person referenced for their section. This took a longer time than we'd anticipated but we got it done in the end. We emailed it to all group members (and CC'd you). The exec summary and conclusion were not done during this meeting, so Bilal and Tima are scheduled to send us all the exec summary on March 12th. Me and Padraig made some notes on the main points that should be included in the conclusion to help Kasai to write it up, and send it by March 12th.

Friday, 10 March 2017

Learning Journal 3 - Ciara, Giulia, Kinza, Tom, Simon

Meeting at Warmington Tower on the 10th March 2017
(everyone present, at least in spirit)

Next meeting scheduled for the 15th March 2017
Developing individually in detail the following paragraphs:

BACKGROUND:
    1. How is England divided in regions?  (Ciara)
    2. Historical development of the regions.  (Ciara)
    3. Differences in the Quality of Life.  (Kinza)
    4. Description of geographical economic inequality and then generalise between North and South. (Kinza)
DIAGNOSIS OF POLICY PROBLEM: 
Wealth Inequality (Giulia)
      1. Different ways to measure the wealth of a nation (definition + datas for the regions) : 
        1. GDP 
        2. Social Progress Index (SPI)
        3. Genuine Progress Indicator (GPI)
        4. United Nations Human Development Index (UNHDI)
        5. Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare (ISEW)
        6. Gross Value Added (GVA)
      2. Is there a new definition of poverty? 
      3. What are the main differences between North and South of England? 
        1. Unemployment 
        2. Health
        3. Education 
        4. Spendings 
        5. Average earners 
        6. Quality of Life
      4. What impact does it have on the economy? 
      5. Transports -> not good public services BUT people can’t afford a car
Brexit influence (Giulia)
      1. How much did the UK (and the Northern Regions) gained from investing in the EU? 
      2. Which regions did mainly benefit from it? 
      3. What decisions will take the EU and the UK in the future regarding improving the economy in the North? 
      4. How are they going to fill the void left from regional European investments? 
      5. How much of these investments were linked to the private sector? 
      6. The Northern Powerhouse 
      7. What does the Budget 2017 say? 
Devolution (Tom) 
      1. Brexit vote
        1. Economic dissatisfaction 
        2. Regional division
      2. Explicitly call for a FEDERAL UNITED KINDOM from Senior Politicians 
      3. Difference between city devolution and regional devolution
      4. Tip the balance further between London and the rest of the Country
Lack of productivity (Simon)
      1. Causes a lack profitability in private enterprises
      2. leads to fewer private investments in these regions, leading to
      3. Lack of employment 
      4. this means less opportunity in general for the individual compared to london
      5. Leads to brain drain
      6. leads to further lack of potential production possibility in these depleted regions.
      7. Leads general low GVA for these regions
Structural financial problem (Tom)
      1. Participation in the country growth (unbalanced) 
      2. Historical unbalance 
      3. Thatcher Big Bang -> financial deregulation 
      4. Impact of the economic mass 
      5. Productivity
      6. Potential productivity gains
      7. Feeder Effect (financial problem in the infrastructure) 
Lack of effective private investment (Simon)
      1. profitability in depleted regions is so low due to productivity, so finance capital favours the south
      2. this leads to fewer opportunities in the north, and so lower employment, and income inequality
      3. Income and wealth inequality lead to lack of Aggregate Demand in Northern regions, further reducing profitability and therefore investment in the private sector for these regions
      4. This causes government spending to favour more profitable regions in terms of infrastructure etc
KEY PRESCRIBED RESPONSES: 
    1. Mobilise investment in the private sector
    2. Implement investment in the infrastructures
    3. Federalisation of the UK 
RECOMMENDATIONS
    1. Northern Investment Bank
    2. Investment in Transport
    3. Devolution of powers

Learning Journal #3 (Simon, Carla, Jack Paula

Learning Journal #3 (Simon, Carla, Jack, Paula)
Review & Plans for 19/03/17

Review meeting: 10/03/17, all present online
Convert bullet points into circa 400-500 word paragraphs, all completed and collated by Simon

Final tasks
ALL: Read and annotate two sources on the Budget 2017


Simon: Edit everyone's previous work on the Autumn Statement 2016 as well as completing the paragraph on the background, a paragraph in the diagnosis of the problem section, the key policy responses section, introduction to the long-term reforms and recommendations section and a paragraph in the recommendations section

Jack: Write a 400-500 word paragraph per theme considering the impact, the costs, and benefits, of tax, welfare, and opportunity on men, as outlined in the Budget 2017, to be sent to Simon by 19/03/17 at the latest.

Carla: Write a 400-500 word paragraph per theme considering the impact, the costs, and benefits, of tax, welfare, and opportunity on women, as outlined in the Budget 2017, to be sent to Simon by 19/03/17 at the latest.

Paula: Write a 400-500 word paragraph per theme considering what recommendations and long-term reforms can be made in regards to the impact of the Budget 2017 on men and women, to be sent to Simon by 19/03/17 at the latest.

Thursday, 9 March 2017

Learning Journal 2- What is the value of unpaid labour to national input?



Journal 2


What is the value of unpaid labour to national output?
Group members: Lottie Quinn, Gabriella Poznansky, Mathew Power, Heather Chesterman.

In this session we identified and analysed key sources on which to base our report; and also outlined the structure and content of the report.

We have decided that in order to adequately assess the government’s household for national statistics account we need to choose what is most important to value, this being the work women do in the home namely childcare, cooking and cleaning. Therefore we are going to analyse the tables of statistics the satellite account offers to see if they completely cover the domestic work women do in the home.

Thursday, 2 March 2017



Who Cooked Adam Smith’s Dinner? Chapter 2

For my blog post I chose to read the second chapter in Katrine Marcal’s Who Cooked Adam Smith’s Dinner?: A Story About Women and Economics. In this chapter we are educated on how economists derive Daniel Defoe’s deserted hero, Robinson Crusoe, and view him as the Homo economicus - the first economic man.

It is natural to wonder how a racist, white man stranded on a desert island holds any relevance to economics – this chapter explains how clearly. In the market each individual is thought to be anonymous, in the sense that personality traits and emotional ties play no relevance in the field. All that matters is the ability to pay, and all that limits us are technicalities such as the amount of hours in a day and our natural resources. In the story, Robinson Crusoe acts completely out of self-interest, and his relationships with other people, namely Friday, are completely centred on what they can do for him. Robinson was born in York, England and studied law, but was dissatisfied with the idea of a middle class life and ventured out in the world in search of success, and found it. It was only after climbing aboard a ship that ends up sinking that he finds himself isolated on a desert island with only a few animals for company. In his logbook he lists money, materials, luck and misfortune. With each situation, Robinson calculates benefits logically. He is free from demands, envy and pride and is rather happy.

Marcal goes on to compare the way Robinson was isolated, to how economists like to isolate people, and how the idea of a person shipwrecked on an island makes it possible to contemplate how people would act if the world around them didn’t exist. Ceteris paribus; ‘All other tings being equal or constant.’ Robinson trades and buys regardless of the fact that money doesn’t exist on this island, the goods are valued according to their demand. This leads us into another story about shipwrecked men that is commonly used by economists in order to illustrate the idea of value being determined by demand. If we are to imagine two men, one of the men holds a sack of rice, whilst the other has 200 gold bracelets. On the mainland, one gold bracelet would usually be enough to purchase the rice. Now picture these men stranded on an island together, and consider the value of their assets again. The value of both have changed, because what is a person supposed to do with 200 gold bracelets on an island with no market or no people? This is a favoured story amongst economists according to Marcal, because it makes them feel as if they have “revealed something profound about how mankind functions”. The problem for Marcal, is that these stories never consider that these two men may converse, and share the rice. These stories do not consider that human beings are capable of more than trade.


Economists consider an economic man to be seductive in the sense that he goes out into the world and works to get what he wants. He is goal orientated and will destroy those who stand in his way. Economics decided that it is man that should be studied. Economic man is rational and thinks in a way that should optimise pleasure and prevent pain, his purpose is to be successful and is the core of what we as people are. The economic man is free in every situation and can “move through the environment like a world-class chess player”. There is also the idea that being selfish and greedy serves a greater good, if everyone was selfish, then in a “magical way” all selfishness could be transformed into what is best for the whole, similar to Adam Smith’s idea of the ‘invisible hand’.

Friday, 24 February 2017

Learning Journal 2 - How useful is well-being as a national or global economic indicator?

How useful is Well-Being as a national or global economic indicator? This policy brief requires an assessment of Well-Being measure and asses what it offers that traditional national account measures do not? This can be either nationally in the UK, or another country, or global happiness index

Group Members: Tom Dixon, Hamza Shahid, Keiron Westmaas, Jeremy Smyth, Maurizio Gregorio

Group meeting 23rd February: Tom Dixon, Keiron Westmaas, Jeremy Smyth

We have decided to focus on recommending the use of well-being as an economic indicator for three main reasons:
- to take into account Sustainability (environmentally) attributing cost of expense to the future
- to take into account Distribution of wealth because it is less useful to know how the incomes and well-being of a mean individual as a pose to a median individual or even the mean values of the three classes
- to take into account household activities such as childcare


Learning Journal #2 (Simon, Carla, Jack, Paula)

Learning Journal #2 (Simon, Carla, Jack, Paula)
Review & Plans for Learning Journal #3

Review meeting: 23/02/17, all present
- Read and annotate 2 different sources, all completed and collated by Simon
- Individual bullet points and notes, all completed and collated by Simon

LJ #3
- Convert bullet points into circa 400-500 word paragraphs
The 2017 Budget, the main focus of the question, is not released until the due date of the next Learning Journal, so the aim is to finish and collectively edit the group's background and diagnosis of policy problems by 08/03/17

Our aim in this policy report is to focus in depth on 3 key aspects of the Budget and Autumn Statement.
Our initial idea is to consider the gender impact of tax (finances), welfare (support for working people) and opportunity (opportunity across the UK), because these themes are prominent in both key texts and many external sources provide useful responses in helping us to write the costs and benefits analysis and recommendations sections of our overall policy report.

Thursday, 23 February 2017

Learning Journal 2- Group J

23rd Feb:

Exec Summary: ALL
Abida-background 
Padraig-diagnosis
Bilal-responses
Kasai-recommendations
Tima-long-term reforms 

Our Policies
add more incentives to go vegan:
governmental support, tax exemption, subsidise the cost of production, imports and exports, advertising to promote more vegan/plant based diets
Conclusion: ALL

In this meeting we read through the examples of the policy reports from previous years and gathered a better understanding of what we need to include in each of our sections. The aim is for each of us to write at least 500 words from our individual sections by March 2nd, which is when we will hold our next meeting. The following week will hopefully be when we collectively write the exec summary and conclusion, by this point our individual sections should be done. In the meantime we will be exchanging any resources we find will be useful to each other via WhatsApp.

Journal 2

Johnnie Roberson, Laurie Farrell, Mahmood Ahmed, Benjamin Thompson


Sustainable Energy Development using Germany as an example case.

Assigned Research Task

Mahmood: Background, history of energy development, history of green energy development.

Laurie: Diagnosis of Problem, contemporary environmental issues, where issues come from and how they affect local communities.

Johnnie: Key Policy Response: National and international response, UN Environmental program. German efforts nationally and in the EU and UN to create an energy development model for the world.

Ben: Long-Term Reforms and Recommendations, how are these issues to be solved, how has progressed been made and recommendations to nations and their institutions.


Progress

Settled on sustainable energy development and divided tasks among us. Key research finds including a German policy paper on this very topic. Ben found additional sources for himself and Laurie. Introduction has started with all of us putting in some input. Ben has thrown in some topics for the conclusion but we are not all agreed.

Sources

·      Runci, Paul J. Renewable Energy Policy in Germany: An Overview and Assessment. Joint Global Change Research Institute, 2005, www.globalchange.umd.edu/data/publications/PNWD-3526.pdf. Accessed 23 Feb. 2017
·      German Policy Report: file:///Users/johnnieroberson/Downloads/A08_Wuestenhagen_Bilharz_EnPol_2006%20(1).pdf


"Is GDP the most reliable and truthful indicator for assessing the development of a state?"
This is probably the dilemma that persuades Sarkozy to start a research on statistical information and measurements about economy and society.

A commission presided by Stiglitz was created in 2008 to discuss and identify the limits of GDP as an indicator of economic performance and social development. The outcome of such inquiry is explained in his report “Mismeasuring our lives: Why GDP doesn’t add up”. The key messages of his work are focused on the need “to adopt a measurement to better reflect the structural changes of economics” and the necessity to shift the attention from production to a measurement of well being.

This need to evaluate the legitimacy of GDP has arisen from the ever-increasing importance given to such index within the political sphere. In fact, in the latest 20 years GDP has gained a leading role in assessing the economic performance of a state and also in influencing policy makers' decisions.

Before going into the details of the topic is fundamental being aware of the information that GDP provides.

Indeed, the gross domestic product can be defined as the monetary value of all the finished goods and services produced within a country's borders in a specific time period. Put simply, is the overall measurement of any economic activities within a state.

Undeniably such guideline has led to a consistent social and economic development in the western world through a continuous update of statistical information. Nonetheless, the coming up of the financial crisis showed the unreliability of this measurement.

In such a context, Stiglitz and his team have investigated the limits of GDP by identifying the essential aspects which are not taken into account by the index.

Indeed, these statistics are not able to provide any information about inequality among social classes. GDP does not define an accurate assessment of the distribution of wealth in a country. An increase in GDP, does not entail a consequent improvement in the conditions of most of the citizens. In other words, even though an average income is recorded, it might still be that most of the people are worse off than before.

Furthermore, no account on quality of goods and services is considered in GDP. In fact, in the index there is no consideration for the technological changes occurred in the latest decades. It’s not only important the quantity produced, but also the quality of the product. This conception may be applied for goods, such as cars and laptops, as well as services, such as education and health services.

A further example claimed by Stiglitz in the understanding of the inadequacy of GDP reflects on traffic jams. Indeed he argues that an increase in traffic is not beneficial for general wellbeing , even though the consumption of gasoline, and consequently GDP, is increasing. By means of it, we can understand the importance of many other factors in the assessment of well being and social progress, such as environment.

Throughout the writing of this report, the Commission has delineated the key dimensions that should be taken into account for defining wellbeing and can be reassumed in 8 essential parameters:

- material living standards (income, consumption and wealth)
- health
- education
- personal activities (including work)
- political voice and governance
- social connections and relationships
- environment
- insecurity in economic as well as physical nature


In conclusion, the executive summary of “mismeasuring of lives: why GDP doesn’t add up” is a useful reading to understand all the fields not taken into account by the GDP measurement. Well being and social progress are not just defined by the output of production, but instead also by the quality of goods and services and their impact on our lives. An alternative indicator able to better describe well being may be, for example, HDI (Human development index) which takes into account literacy, life expectancy as well as GDP pro capita and would be able to provide a wider and more defined picture of the development of a country.

Wednesday, 22 February 2017

Learning Journal 2 -

From collecting our individual research and discussing our findings it is clear that each area of the English economy (infrastructure, health, education, employment & the environment) features a 'London bias’. It goes without saying that London has the largest economy of all the regions but the extent to which London needs attention from the exchequer and if the economy needs rebalancing is matter of debate.

Tomas: Infrastructure

In terms of investment and rail & road usage, London sticks out as an economy in a league of it's own. Not only does it consistently attract by far the most investment per head year by year but has the largest private sector to match. The three northern most regions (NE, NW, YH) have both the lowest per head investment and smallest private sectors. From research done by Sheffield Political Economy Research Institute on the strong correlation between a relatively large private sector and investment of public money, we can call into question the government’s mantra that public investment ‘crowds out’ business. In terms of supporting domestic trade, roads are far more instrumental than rail or water ways, accounting for three times as many goods transported as the later two. Interestingly, the regions with the lowest investment and smallest economies show the least promise of return on the public investment, which is a serious hurdle for re-balancing the UK’s economy.

Simon: Economy

According to a study by Spatial economics, offshoring to countries with cheaper labour is most often done with routine jobs, but due to advancing technologies, this is now being done to almost all types of routine jobs. This decrease in routine labour is then not offset by a matching rise in non-routine jobs, leading to fewer job opportunities, especially in areas where routine jobs are a large proportion of total jobs. The map above shows which areas this applies to.
Jobs also being lost to the south, however. ONS data shows how ‘the economy’ began to recover in the north after the recession, but this happened 3 years later than in the south. The ONS said: “Northern England regions collectively have grown below the UK average in both the 2009-2014 period (growing at 2.2%) and the 2013-2014 period (growing at 2.7%). This is in stark contrast to the southern regions, which collectively have grown by 7.5% during the 2009-2014 period and 3.5% during the 2013-2014 period.”The ONS figures show employment growth in the UK as a whole was 4.8% a year on average from 2009-14, and 3.1% between 2013 and 2014Even discounting London, the south still grew much more than the north. ONS point to ‘manufacturing’ as a possible cause, as lack of demand sees the 2nd most common job sector in the north somewhat faltering. Manufacturing is only 7th most common job in the south, with finance taking charge, and tory government have made the financial sector extremely lucrative these days.In 2013-24, London +17%, Brighton +11%, Bournemouth +9%, Aberdeen +7%, Blackpool -10%, Rochdale -8%, Newport -9%.In terms of Private Sector Jobs, growth in the south was 12%, elsewhere it was -1%. Only the huge public sector offered employment opportunities elsewhere.In 2015, FT said GVA was probs the best way to determine ‘economic dynamism’ in the country.
Showing growth by region compared to UK-wide growth.But economic growth in London has not resulted in reduced poverty or inequality. On the contrary, poverty rates for various groups, including children, have seen much less improvement in London compared to the Northern regions; house price affordability and private rental costs have increased substantially in London but not in the North; homelessness has worsened in London but improved in the North; and overcrowding remains particularly acute in the capital.The paper, Pulling in the Same Direction? Economic and Social Outcomes in London and the North of England Since the Recession, by Polina Obolenskaya, Ruth Lupton and Bert Provan, concludes: “The findings suggest not only a need for regional rebalancing of both the economic and social kind, but that economic growth per se cannot be relied upon to improve social outcomes in any region – and in particular it cannot be relied upon to reduce poverty and inequality”.It recommends closer monitoring of regional disparities and levels of inequality within regions, and a clearer understandings of how growth strategies and public service reform can generate “inclusive growth” in different local places.Offshoring to cheaper countries has resulted in fewer job prospects in manufacturing-based economies found prominently in the north east and north west of England. Additionally, huge job growth in London has led to a ‘brain drain’ with workers moving south to follow the opportunities. Northern cities suffer from this, and this as well as lack of private sector investment has led to huge differences in growth between northern and southern cities, with GVA per head 3 times higher in London than in northern cities. In Northern cities, private sector jobs fell by 1%, and public sector jobs, making up the vast majority of total jobs in these areas also fell. Crowding out phenomenon seems debunked, and the North just gets less back of both public and private sector investment, discouraging both types of investment in the north.


Kinza: Environment

It seems that the regions in England with higher levels of funding capacity don’t necessarily correlate to consumption and productivity, at least in terms of living standards, due to environmental conditions. A good example of this is agricultural land becoming an increasingly augmented asset due to the lack of it, with agriculture condensing in the very fertile East of England. Through retirement planning and tax breaks (CGT, IHT etc.) farmland has fallen into higher demand nation-wide.
This is reflected by the government encouraging diversity in farms through the Rural Development Programme for England that offered loans and grants especially to tenant farmers who could produce a surplus. The below areas are examples of agricultural surplus in England.

certain species of goat for mohair or cashmere or angora rabbits for their wool
sheep and/or goats for their milk and specialist cheese-producing potential
new world camelids - eg llamas, alpacas, guanacos or vicunas for their pelts or wool

Ciara: Education

Education in the UK shows disproportionate funding per pupil across the UK. Over the last two decades, London has benefited from an increase in funding, with schools in the inner city receiving up to £5,917 per pupil, above the national average in England of £4,306 (IPPE). The inequality is due to regional spending, and the rise of academies, which leave local councils powerless to intervene and build improvement programs within the schools. Using examination results as a marker of excellence, one cannot use deprivation as an indicator, as reports show that London’s disadvantaged achieve better outcomes than pupils in the north. Northern schools are failing because they receive less funding, despite similar intakes of pupils, with pre-determined funds being allocated from the central government. London hosts the top 10 schools for GCSE results in the country, with the lowest 10 performing schools located in areas of the North West, North East and the Midlands.

Giulia: Health

We are going to focus on the differences inside the regions of England regarding healthcare. In general it ha been shown that the northern regions generally do less well than the midlands and London, and the best performing regions are the East of England and southern regions compared to the overall English average.
Some indicators which oppose the general trend are:
High levels of childhood obesity in London – this contrasts the majority of indicators doing better than England in this region. This finding is backed up by the APHO Profiles.
High proportion of drug use in the South East – goes against the trend of good health in this region
High levels of breast cancer incidence in the South West – opposing the picture of good health in this region. (Radon)

In keeping with the other areas of research, the North-East sticks out the most, followed by the the North West which together are over the UK average for public investment.
In the final report we are going to have to ascertain the supply-need dynamic in the regions, how this relates to ‘value for money’ for the taxpayer and how this will change when the new budget is introduced.