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Economic Development

Special report: What does the future hold for Liverpool's economy?

Why city needs more labs - and why regeneration needs Paul Hollywood

From left, Lorna Rogers, Andy Haldane, and Jessica Bowles - all speakers at the University of Liverpool Vice Chancellor’s Conference

It’s not often you get everyone from a Premier League CEO to a bishop in a room talking about everything from video games to Paul Hollywood.

But that was all on the agenda at Liverpool’s Maritime Museum last week as the University of Liverpool brought together some of the city region’s biggest names to talk about what the city’s future might look like.

The Vice-Chancellor’s Conference, hosted by Professor Tim Jones, saw speakers debate all the changes the city region needed to see in areas from technology to diversity. And BusinessLive was there.

Among the speakers was Liverpool Football Club CEO Billy Hogan, who said he believed Liverpool was ready to “take off” - we reported on his comments here.

And the event also saw the official launch of the Liverpool Strategic Futures Panel to plot a roadmap for Liverpool’s governance once Government commissioners have left - . Metro Mayor Steve Rotheram and Liverpool council leader Liam Robinson were also among the speakers at the showpiece event, which was hosted by regeneration expert Professor Michael Parkinson.

Why regeneration is like the Great British Bake Off

The keynote speaker was former Bank of England chief economist Andy Haldane, now chief executive of the Royal Society of Arts (RSA). He said Liverpool’s regeneration was clearly “unfinished business” but that the city region had lots of things to shout about.

He said the city’s history was “era-defining” and that Liverpool’s name still had massive worldwide recognition - “Among non-capital cities it ranks in the top ten globally”.

Mr Haldane said Levelling Up and other grand Government plans over many years had failed cities like Liverpool - due to “poor leadership, lack of money, or inept execution - or often all three acting in combo”.