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Foreign cash helps Scotland buck downturn

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Published Date: 14 June 2009
FIRST Minister Alex Salmond will unveil figures tomorrow revealing that Scotland continues to attract higher-value jobs from overseas investors.
The headline figures will show £500 million of investment was pumped into the Scottish economy from existing and new investors who created or protected jobs despite the economic downturn.

The past year has produced 1,807 high-value jobs – defined
as those paying above £31,000 a year – which is the third highest total since 2003. The highest was 2,578 in 2007-8.

While 80 per cent of jobs were secured from existing investors, Scottish Development International, the body charged with promoting Scotland's international business objectives, will take particular satisfaction in attracting 25 per cent of the total research and development projects drawn to the UK during the year.

Lena Wilson, chief executive of SDI and chief operating officer at Scottish Enterprise, said: "We are more than punching our weight."

She accepted that while the £500m did not match the £3 billion to £4bn figures that caught the headlines in the 1990s, it was a healthy reflection of today's inward investment market.

"It also does not take into account the multiplier effect of how much business is created further down the chain among suppliers and so on."

She is particularly encouraged that many of the investing firms are now anchored in Scotland because of the quality of the workforce. "Scotland is not a cheap location. It is about value," she said.

The publication of the SDI results precedes the update of the Scottish Government's Economy Recovery Programme tomorrow.

Salmond is expected to reference the performance of SDI and the Government's next steps under the Economic Recovery Programme during his address to the Forbes conference at Gleneagles. He will say that SDI has helped more than 800 Scottish firms expand internationally, 100 more than last year, highlighting the importance of exploring new markets in a downturn.

He will say: "Seventy-five per cent of our labour force is in employment despite the global recession. Unemployment is lower, employment is higher and activity rates are higher than the rest of the UK. Increasing sustainable economic growth is the overarching purpose of the Government and I know we can and will achieve this despite the current pressures."



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1

The Answer,

Glasgow 14/06/2009 01:16:37
"salmond will say

Unemployment is lower, employment is higher and activity rates are higher than the rest of the UK"

salmond telling porkies again!

Facts (less than 1 in 5 jobs England are public sector, 1 in 4 jobs scotland are public sector)

64.1% economic activity rate England
63.8% economic activity rate scotland

35.9% economic inactivity rate England
36.2% economic iactivity rate scotland

71.4% male economic activity rate England
70.3% male economic activit rate scotland

28.6% male inactivity rate England
29.7% male inactivity rate scotland

65.8% male employment rate England
65.5% male employment rate scotland

ELMR Statistics.gov.uk June 2009
tinyurl.com/qv3p3g
2

Nebulous,

Aberdeen 14/06/2009 18:49:00
"The answer" I'm not getting that from the table you posted. From the summary table on the front page:-

Total aged 16 and over economically active.
England 79.7%
Scotland 79.8%

Employment men
England 77.7%
Scotland 77.6%

Employment women
England 69.6%
Scotland 72.1%

Unemployment men
England 7.8%
Scotland 6.9%

Unemployment women
England 6.4%
Scotland 4.7%

So those figures are pretty strongly in Scotland's favour. Just one more point, don't women count in your world?
3

The Strategist,

14/06/2009 23:11:22
I'm really looking forward to seeing this list because simply don't believe and never have believed that over reliance on inward investment was a sensible thing.

 

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