HC Deb 05 February 1976 vol 904 cc709-17W
Mr. Ioan Evans

asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer on what statistical criteria the Paymaster-General on 19th

IDENTIFIABLE PUBLIC EXPENDITURE*
(a) Total Identifiable Expenditure per head.
1969–70 1970–71 1971–72 1972–73 1973–74 1974–75
£ £ £ £ £ £
England 246 276 308 349 431 582
Scotland 335 364 403 460 517 691
Wales 295 316 359 401 452 601
Great Britain 257 287 320 362 440 593
England = 100
England 100 100 100 100 100 100
Scotland 136 132 131 132 120 119
Wales 120 114 117 115 105 103
Great Britain 104 104 104 104 102 102
(b) Excluding Nationalised Industries.
England = 100
1973–74 1973–75 1973–74 1974–75
£ £ £ £
England 402 545 England 100 100
Scotland 481 636 Scotland 120 117
Wales 431 578 Wales 107 106
Great Britain 411 555 Great Britain 102 102
* Identifiable public expenditure in each country is expenditure which can be identified from official records as having been incurred in that country excluding expenditures undertaken for the benefit of the United Kingdom as a whole, such as defence, overseas services and debt interest, for which it is not possible to apportion precisely the actual share of that benefit enjoyed by any particular part of the United Kingdom. Because the British Steel Corporation does not provide figures of capital expenditure by region "identifiable expenditure" as defined above excludes investment by the nationalised steel industry. This somewhat distorts the comparison in Table (a) because of the great relative importance of steel in the Welsh economy. Figures excluding capital expenditure by the nationalised industries are accordingly provided in Table (b) as an alternative basis of comparison. It is regretted that such figures are available only for 1973–74 and 1974–75.
Provisional.

Regional Industrial Policy Expenditure 1974–75: Great Britain, Scotland and Wales.

In the financial year 1974–75 total expenditure on regional preferential

£ million
Regional Development Grant Selective Financial Assistance Local Employment Acts Regional Employment Premium Other Schemes* Total Percentage of total
England 119.0 23.8 15.4 76.2 11.2 245.6 52.0
Scotland 61.6 5.1 13.6 57.2 8.8 146.3 31.0
Wales 32.2 7.5 10.6 22.0 9.2 81.5 17.0
Great Britain 212.8 36.4 39.6 155.4 29.2 473.4 100.0
* Regionally preferential element only included where scheme also applied nationally.

Note: All figures are gross, i.e., net of any repayments of loans, etc.

Source: Department of Industry.

January (Official Report, columns 925–38) based his judgments concerning public expenditure, regional policy and its effects on the Scottish and Welsh economy, the employment benefits of North Sea oil to the Scottish economy, and the balance or trade of Scotland and Wales.

Mr. Dell

Yes, statistics are as follows:

assistance to industry amounted to £473 million in the assisted areas of Great Britain. The table below shows how much of this expenditure was incurred on assistance for projects in Scotland, Wales and the assisted areas of England.

Scotland and Wales account for approximately 22 per cent. and 10 per cent. respectively of employees—employed and unemployed—in the assisted areas, but receive respectively 31 per cent. and 17 per cent. of total expenditure. Expenditure in terms of £ per head of employees in the assisted areas in 1974–75 was:

England 37
Scotland 68
Wales 79
Great Britain 48

Industrial Development Certificates (IDC's).

In an article to be published in "Economica" in February 1976 Messrs Moore and Rhodes conclude that the IDC policy coupled with the Government's factory building programme diverted some 45 new factories each year into the development areas between 1960 and 1971. In that decade they were the most important single influence on the annual diversion of new factories from non-

RELATIVE EARNINGS IN SCOTLAND AND WALES
Earnings
(Source: Department of Employment Gazette)
(i) Average Male Manual Workers
As a percentage of United Kingdom figure 1960 1965 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974
Scotland 91.6 94.2 96.4 96.6 97.5 98.6 99.5
Wales 101.4 98.5 99.6 100.6 99.4 99.0 97.8
(Source: New Earnings Survey)
(ii) Average Earnings All Workers
As a percentage of Great Britain figure 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975
Scotland:
Males 94.3 95.1 95.4 96.4 96.4 99.2
Females 93.9 95.1 95.1 96.1 95.5 96.0
Wales:
Males 96.0 96.7 97.5 96.9 96.9 97.0
Females 97.5 97.3 97.1 97.0 95.5 95.7

Unemployment in United Kingdom, Scotland and Wales.

Current unemployment throughout the United Kingdom is by recent historical

Average 1960–63 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 January 1976
Scotland
Percentage unemployed 3.5 3.6 4.1 5.7 6.2 4.5 3.9 4.9 6.1
United Kingdom relative 194 149 160 168 167 170 151 124 118
Wales
Percentage unemployed 2.7 3.9 3.8 4.3 4.7 3.4 3.6 5.4 6.8
United Kingdom relative 148 162 147 127 126 129 140 135 132

development to development areas; investment incentives diverted 36 new factories a year, other policies diverted 40 new factories a year. When translated into employment terms the IDC policy generated of the order of 100,000 jobs in the development areas in the decade, roughly one-third of the estimated impact of regional policy measures. It is not yet possible to give estimates of the specific contribution of the IDC policies to employment in Wales and Scotland.

During periods when the IDC policy was stringently applied, for example, in the late 1960s, as many as one-third of IDC applications, as measured by the employment involved, in the Midlands and South-East Regions were refused. Evidence given by 25 large United Kingdom companies to the Trade and Industry Sub-Committee of the Expenditure Committee reveals that many of these IDC refusals have resulted in new factories being established in the development areas.

standards very high. However, the relative position of Scotland and Wales has improved significantly since the beginning of the 1960s.

Average 1960–63 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1967
United Kingdom
Percentage unemployed 1.8 2.4 2.6 3.4 3.7 2.6 2.6 4.0 5.2
United Kingdom relative 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100

Notes:

(1) Averages of seasonally adjusted figures excluding school leavers and adult students.

(2) 1974 is an average of January to November. There are no December figures due to industrial action.

Employment Effects of Regional Policy in Scotland and Wales

According to estimates published by Messrs. Rhodes and Moore in their article in the 1974 "Scottish Journal of Political Economy", regional policy generated 70,000 to 80,000 jobs in Scotland between 1960 and 1971.

Nearly three-quarters of the employment gain is estimated to have arisen from the increased inflow of firms rather

NUMBER OF OPENINGS OF MANUFACTURING ESTABLISHMENTS
Region Active Policy 1945–51 Passive Policy 1952–59 Active Policy 1960–71
Scotland 77 50 273
Other Development Areas 368 149 809
Total Development Area Openings 445 199 1,082

Note:

These figures exclude those openings which have subsequently closed down and thus are not directly comparable with the figures relating to Wales below.

Using the same method as in their paper in the "Scottish Journal of Political Economy" Messrs. Rhodes and Moore have estimated the effects of regional policy for Wales. Their results are published as a Welsh Office Occasional Paper 1975. They concluded that the strengthening of regional policy generated some 70,000 to 80,000 new jobs in Wales between 1960 and 1972 and that, in relation to its size, regional policy has generated more jobs in Wales than in any other assisted area.

NUMBER OF OPENINGS OF MANUFACTURING ESTABLISHMENTS
Region Active Policy 1945–51 Passive Policy 1952–59 Active Policy 1960–71
Wales 277 73 310
Other Development Areas 486 237 990
Total 763 310 1,300

Since 1971–1972 in the case of Wales—it is provisionally estimated that a further 20,000 jobs have been generated

than from additional employment in long-established firms.

Data on inter-regional movement of manufacturing industry collected by the Department of Trade and Industry over the period 1945 to 1971 confirm the view that the amount of industrial movement, not only to Scotland but to all development areas, is very much higher in periods of active regional policy than in the period of passive regional policy.

Just over 50 per cent. of the jobs were generated by an acceleration in the establishment of new plants after 1960 whilst just under half were created by induced expansion of firms which had already been operating in Wales prior to 1960.

The way in which the pattern of new openings of manufacturing plant has varied over time in Wales according to whether or not active regional policy has been pursued is shown in the table below:

in Scotland and a similar number in Wales.

Employment Associated with North Sea oil

There has been a steady increase in the number of people employed in Scotland on North Sea oil-related work. The Department of Employment return for December 1975 shows that 23,700 people were employed by firms solely engaged on North Sea oil work. i.e., by companies wholly engaged in oil-related activities. In addition, it is estimated that a further 10–15,000 are employed by firms part only of whose output is devoted to North Sea oil work. When allowance is made for those employed in construction work and those indirectly employed—in service and other support industries—a substantially higher figure emerges. The best estimate of the total number of jobs in Scotland

SCOTLAND
£ million
1961 1964 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971
GDP 2,067 2,458 2,811 2,944 3,176 3,354 3,688 4,098
GDE 2,267 2,695 3,011 3,222 3,520 3,700 4,081 4,509
Balance of Trade -200 -237 -200 -278 -344 -346 -393 -411
As a Percentage of GDP 9.7 9.6 7.1 9.4 10.8 10.3 10.7 10.0

Sources:

"Expenditure in Scotland 1961–71"—Begg, Lythe and Sorley.

Scottish Economic Bulletin, Nos. 5 and 8.

WALES
£ million
1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972
GDP 1,332 1,399 1,452 1,572 1,634 1,808 2,014 2,289
GDE 1,439 1,531 1,637 1,763 1,801 2,068 2,260 2,555
Balance of Trade -107 -132 -185 -191 -167 -260 -246 -266
As a percentage of GDP 8.0 9.4 12.7 12.2 10.2 14.4 12.2 11.6

Source:

Digest of Welsh Statistics 1971.

Welsh Economic Trends No. 2.

Estimates of the United Kingdom balance of trade are directly available from the uational accounts, on a comparable factor cost basis.

UNITED KINGDOM
£ million
1961 1964 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972
Balance of Trade -270 -778 -288 -565 -595 -200 -76 +238 -658
As a Percentage of GDP 1.1 2.7 0.7 1.6 1.6 0.5 0.2 (+)0.5 1.2

Sources: National Income and Expenditure 1972 and 1964–74

Scotland was in deficit throughout the period 1961–71 by amounts ranging from 7.1 per cent. to 10.8 per cent. of GDP while, over the shorter period 1965–1972, the corresponding figures for Wales show a deficit varying between 9.4 per cent. and 14.4 per cent. of GDP. During the period covered by the Scottish and Welsh data the largest deficit as a percentage of GDP recorded for the United Kingdom resulting from North Sea oil at the end of December 1975 is 50–55,000. This compares with a figure of 35–40,000 at the end of 1974.

Balance of Trade: United Kingdom, Scotland and Wales

In their book "Expenditure in Scotland 1961–1971" Messrs. Begg, Lythe and Sorley of the University of Dundee have derived estimates of Scotland's balance of trade position by subtracting their own estimates of gross domestic expenditure from the gross domestic product figures—both at factor cost—published by the Scottish Office. According to this method and using the latest available published information, the balance of trade for Scotland and Wales respectively was as follows:

was 2.7 per cent. in 1964, less than one-third of the average figures for Scotland and Wales. Since 1972, the United Kingdom balance of trade deficit has risen as a percentage of GDP to 3.7 per cent. in 1973 and to 7.1 per cent. in 1974; there is no reason to believe that Scotland and Wales have not followed this deteriorating pattern.

Balance of trade estimates differ from balance of payments current account figures because they exclude both net pro- perty income and net current transfers from abroad. As both Tomkins ("National Accounts for Wales ") and Messrs. Begg, Lythe and Sorley in their study of Scotland point out, balance of trade figures derived by subtracting estimates of gross domestic expenditure from gross domestic product must be treated with caution. There are several conceptual problems surrounding the estimation of the components that make up gross domestic expenditure which can only be resolved by sometimes arbitrary and often debatable assumptions; the figures for gross domestic product are also subject to a margin of error. Nevertheless, the pattern is sufficiently consistent to suggest that the balance of trade figures are significant.

The series of gross domestic expenditure estimates for Scotland for 1961–71 was prepared by Messrs. Begg, Lythe and Sorley as the major part of a project assisted by a Social Science Research Council grant. Although a further grant has been awarded by the Council it is intended to cover the cost of work on estimating gross domestic product measured from output data rather than for further updating of the estimates of gross domestic expenditure. However, as part of a commitment to the statistical office of the European Community, the Central Statistical Office is now preparing estimates of the major items of gross domestic expenditure for all regions of the United Kingdom. The data for Wales are published annually following original work carried out at University College, Bangor.

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