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Comment: Culture and economy can thrive with a little creative thinking

John Kampfner, chief executive of the Creative Industries Federation, is calling on the new West Midlands mayor to place the creative sector at the top of the agenda

Symphony Hall is one of the city's great cultural institutions(Image: flickr / Gethin Thomas)

There was a time not so long ago when politicians scarcely mentioned culture. Some still don't.

So it was gratifying that new metro mayor Andy Street recognises the West Midlands' success in the creative industries and the enormous potential of the sector.

The creative industries are worth £87 billion - more than the car industry or aerospace - and have been growing faster than the rest of the British economy since the 2008 crash.

Although many major cultural institutions remain based in London, Birmingham and the West Midlands are among areas seeing significant new employment.

The number of jobs in the creative industries rose by 15.6 per cent in London between 2011 and 2015 but by 38.7 per cent in the West Midlands.

Nearly three million people now have jobs in the creative economy.

This includes the designers behind the sleek lines of a Rolls-Royce or Jaguar as well as the young creatives in the BBC's Digital Guerillas innovation unit.