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- Joined: Tue Jul 15, 2014 2:35 pm
The GVA figures are ouit and Wales is firmly anchored at the bottom of the league. Whereas we were in a straight fight with the North East for that dubious honour they seem to have pulled ahead. The link to the BBC story is here -
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-35050611
The figures make grim reading. Wales is at the bottom of the regional table, west Wales and the Valleys is at the bottom of the sub-regional table and Anglesey is bottom of the local area table. Whilst the economy is growing it isn't growing as fast as everywhere else which is why the gap is widening. GVA for Wales is 71.4% of the UK average.
The news for Cardiff isn't great either. Of the 13 largest cities in the UK Cardiff has the lowest level of growth at 0.9%. Whereas just a few short years ago Cardiff's GVA was above the UK avearge it's now substantially less.
It's easy to point the finger at the Labour led admin in Cardiff Bay and they must bear responsibility. We were promised a devolution dividend if I recall the late 90's correctly but what we've received is the opposite. They've had 16 years of uninterrupted power and we've not even managed to stand still in that time.
But blaming Labour alone is missing the point I think. Structurally the Welsh economy is extremely fragile and the large numbers of people who earn their living over the border doesn't help matters. I wonder if GVA by household will make any difference to our standing?
Does anyone have any answers other than to blame Labour? Will the city region and the metro make a huge difference? Is this just the natural order of things - after all Wales is a sparsely populated, geographically challenging country with one medium sized city and very poor infrastucture, an older and less well educated population in comparison with other area's?
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-35050611
The figures make grim reading. Wales is at the bottom of the regional table, west Wales and the Valleys is at the bottom of the sub-regional table and Anglesey is bottom of the local area table. Whilst the economy is growing it isn't growing as fast as everywhere else which is why the gap is widening. GVA for Wales is 71.4% of the UK average.
The news for Cardiff isn't great either. Of the 13 largest cities in the UK Cardiff has the lowest level of growth at 0.9%. Whereas just a few short years ago Cardiff's GVA was above the UK avearge it's now substantially less.
It's easy to point the finger at the Labour led admin in Cardiff Bay and they must bear responsibility. We were promised a devolution dividend if I recall the late 90's correctly but what we've received is the opposite. They've had 16 years of uninterrupted power and we've not even managed to stand still in that time.
But blaming Labour alone is missing the point I think. Structurally the Welsh economy is extremely fragile and the large numbers of people who earn their living over the border doesn't help matters. I wonder if GVA by household will make any difference to our standing?
Does anyone have any answers other than to blame Labour? Will the city region and the metro make a huge difference? Is this just the natural order of things - after all Wales is a sparsely populated, geographically challenging country with one medium sized city and very poor infrastucture, an older and less well educated population in comparison with other area's?