Return to National productivity measures

Inputs – Capital

  • The UK currently invests a smaller percentage of its GDP than any of its G7 competitors except the USA yet capital investment is said to be ‘the lifeblood of economic growth’

  • The more you invest, the more national productivity tends to rise, unit costs fall, competitiveness rises, sales rise and wealth, jobs and tax-take increase

  • But the amount of investment a nation needs depends on where it’s starting from:

    • If capital assets are worn out or in old smoke-stack industries, more will be needed than if they are relatively new, as in China

    • The UK has much of the infrastructure it needs in place already – however, high speed rail links, more regional airport capacity and more motorways across the Pennines or from the south coast to the Midlands or from Chichester to the Chunnel are desperately needed still

  • The UK’s problem lies in finding sources of this investment:

    • Private sector profits are being squeezed

    • Banks are re-building their balance sheets and investing in risk-free assets

    • Business angels and venture capitalists seem ever cautious

    • The UK government has to make public expenditure cuts over the next few years – its pockets are not bottomless pits

    • Foreign Direct Investment – FDI –  which once imported cash, latest  technology and best practices, has been drying up

  • Overall, the UK’s prospects for growth from increased capex do not appear to be robust

 

 

 

 

 

 

Leave a Reply

Your e-mail address will not be published.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.