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PRIVACY
Opinionopinion

Foreign Investors in the English Regions: Who ya Gonna Call?

David Bailey writes "The recent survey by Ernst & Young of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's attractiveness to foreign investment showed a 2.7% rise in foreign-backed º£½ÇÊÓÆµ projects"

The recent survey by Ernst & Young of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's attractiveness to foreign investment showed a 2.7% rise in foreign-backed º£½ÇÊÓÆµ projects.

This came in the face of an overall decline in investment across Europe. Measures such as the 'patent box', offering a lower tax rate on some intellectual property, seem to have helped to improve the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's overall attractiveness.

London (which has kept its development agency) remained the regional investment powerhouse in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, attracting 45% of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's total projects. This was equivalent in scale to the fourth largest European country. The devolved administrations of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland also saw strong increases. 

However the English regions outside of London, now represented by Local Enterprise Partnerships following the scrapping of Regional Development Agencies (RDAs), mostly saw significant declines in foreign investment projects, taking their aggregate number of projects in 2012 down to a level almost a quarter lower than that in 2010. The West Midlands was, however, one region that bucked the trend but even here the region didn't see an increase in projects as against 2010.

And when reinvestments in existing projects were stripped out, the disappointing regional position on new inward investment projects came out even more strongly.

The report notes that in 2012, the English regions as a whole outside of London secured their smallest total of new investment projects on record, at just 122 projects. And comparing that 2012 figure with 2009 (the final year before the scrapping of RDAs was announced), then new projects secured by the English regions had declined by 40%.

And it was interesting that perceptions of the English regions among investors in 2012 had declined markedly; ratings for North-East England dropped from 10% to 2%; East Midlands from 9% to 2%; the North-West of England from 9% to 4%; and Yorkshire from 4% to 1%.

Not surprisingly, the report notes that " the findings on the declining performance of the English regions outside London - especially in attracting new projects - raise further doubts over the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's ability to retain its lead in European FDI. "