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Economic Development

South West to 'close economic gap' on London by 2025, EY report finds

The accountancy giant said Bristol, in particular, recovered to pre-pandemic levels of economic activity last year

A report has found Bristol recovered to pre-pandemic levels of economic activity last year.(Image: Handout)

The South West is only one of two regions in England set to gain ground on London's economy over the next three years as the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ recovers from Covid-19, according to a new report.

Accountancy giant Ernst and Young (EY) has forecast the region’s economy, measured by the value of goods and services produced or Gross Value Added (GVA), to be 9% larger in 2025 than it was in 2019

This would give the South West the second-largest increase among English regions, behind only the East Midlands (9.5%) and ahead of London (8.9%).

The report said the rise was driven by Bristol, which was one of only two major cities – alongside Nottingham – to recover to pre-pandemic levels of economic activity by the end of 2021.

EY estimated in terms of GVA and employment the South West would have annual growth rates of 2.8% and 1% respectively from 2022 to 2025 - a similar pace to the rest of the country.

The region’s human health and social work sector was expected to post the largest increases in employment over the period.

The report said the South West’s economy had put in a “resilient performance”, during the initial stages of the pandemic, with GVA only 2.5% lower by the end of 2021 than in 2019. By contrast, the national GVA was 3% lower and London’s was 3.6% lower.

Bristol’s GVA was expected to expand by 3.1% per year between 2022 and 2025 - the fastest rate of growth in the region.