Title: Developing a Smart, Successful Scotland
1Developing a Smart, Successful Scotland
- Charlie Woods - Scottish Enterprise
- World Bank Seminar
- Riga - 8 June 2004
2Introduction
- Scotland background
- Strategic Challenges
- Smart, Successful Scotland
- Strategy into action
3Scotland
Inverness
Aberdeen
Dundee
Edinburgh
Glasgow
Area 79,000 sq km Population 5mn GDP
115bn Employment 73
4Output
Output
5Output
Share of GDP
6Output
7Manufactured Exports
Source SCDI
8Manufactured Exports
9Research potential
10Key strategic issues for Scotland
Strengths
Weaknesses
- output growth
- domestic demand
- productivity
- business starts
- growth/global firms
- business RD
- skills demand
- excluded communities and individuals
- some world class firms
- key industries
- existing and emerging
- research base
- graduate output
- international reputation
- international cities
- rural environment
- identity/size
Opportunities
Threats
- new technologies
- new international markets/partners
- more sophisticated consumers
- pace of change
- global upturn
- price competition
- emerging competitors
- obsolete skills
- population change
- decline/ageing
- global uncertainty
11Cumulative Causationeven more potent in the
knowledge economy
Productivity
Income
Migration
New starts
Skills
Innovation
RD
HQs
12Smart, Successful Scotland
Themes and Priorities
Measurement Framework
13Scottish economy performance gap
summary(distance from average of OECD top
quartile)
Absolute size of gap
7,000
14,000
133,700
930mn
4.25/hr
140 Euros
1,985mn
209,000
27,000
99,000
38,000
144,000
115,000
or nearest available comparator
14The Scottish Enterprise Network
- Purpose a strong economy - sustainable economic
growth - Pursuing national priorities - sensitive to local
needs and opportunities - Addressing market failure
- Focussed on the customer
- Working with partners
- A catalyst for more/better/faster investment
- Finance/knowledge/connections
- Projects integrated for maximum impact
15Growing Business Priorities and Projects
- Growing Business
- greater entrepreneurial dynamism and creativity
- more e-business
- increased commercialisation of research and
innovation - global success in key sectors
- Stimulating commercially successful innovation
- e.g. Intermediary Technology Institutes (Energy,
Life Sciences, Techmedia), Proof of Concept,
Enterprise Fellowships, RD incentive - Realising high growth potential in companies
- e.g. account/client management, Co-investment
fund, investment readiness, high growth start up
unit, advanced e-business - Stimulating greater entrepreneurial activity
- e.g. Business Gateway
- Industry focus for integrating action
- Energy, Biotech, Microelectronics, Tourism,
Financial Services, Food Drink, Forest
products, Creative Industries - Headline progress measures 2004/05
- Business starts 9,000 - 10,000
- High growth starts 150 - 200
- Account managed improvements 340 - 400
- Knowledge transfer 100 - 120
- 2004/05 budget 125 - 135mn
16Global Connections Priorities and Projects
- Supporting and attracting global businesses
- e.g. knowledge-in/knowledge-out, Scottish
Development International, Global Companies
Development programme - Global business infrastructure
- e.g. Broadband for Scotland, Route Development
Fund - Major strategic place development
- e.g. Investment plan (Clyde Regeneration, St
Andrews World Class etc) - Attracting and retaining talented people
- e.g. Talent Scotland, Fresh Talent
- Headline progress measures 2004/05
- Business Internationalisation 720 - 850
- High value Inward Investment 1,000 -1,300
- 2004/05 budget 125 - 135mn
17Learning Skills Priorities and Projects
- Learning Skills
- improve the operation of the labour market
- the best start for all young people
- narrow the unemployment gap
- improve demand for high quality in-work training
- Realising workforce potential
- Young People - MAs, Skillseekers, Get Ready for
Work, career education - Adults - MAs, Training for Work, PACE, career
education - Business - BLAs, IiP, industry skill plans
- Reducing information failures in the labour
market - e.g. All age careers planning and support, Future
Skills Scotland - Stimulating an enterprise culture
- e.g. Enterprise in Education
- Headline progress measures 2004/05
- Career planning 175,000 - 190,000
- Occupational Training 41,000 - 46,000
- Positive Outcomes from training 16,000 -
19,000 - SME workforce development 2,300 - 2,600
- 2004/05 budget 185 - 195mn
18Cross cutting priorities
- Sustainable Development
- increased resource productivity
- new green business opportunities
- Social Justice
- stimulating employment opportunities close to
under-performing areas - helping people close to the labour market access
opportunities - Rural Development
- mainstream programmes tailored to market
failures and unrealised potential in rural areas - Transport
- economic intelligence for transport investment
- incentives to prove new routes
- Equal opportunities
- addressing unrealised economic potential
e.g. business starts by women
19Making the connections
BioDundee
Colleges Biotech Consortium
Life Sciences ITI Proof of Concept Fund (36
Biotech)
20Making the connections
Skills Learning
Global Connections
Growing Business
Private Partners
Sustainable Economic Growth
Scottish Enterprise Network
Public Partners (EU Partnerships, Local
Government, Funding councils etc)
Infrastructure Planning
Education
Research