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PRIVACY
Tech

Birmingham should have an innovation district to kick start 'new economy', says Centre for Cities

Economic think tank is calling for the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ government to chanel funding into creating a dedicate centre for boosting tech economies

(Image: Tomasz Zajda - stock.adobe.com)

An innovation district should be created in Birmingham by the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government to boost the so-called new economy, according to a major new study out today.

Economic think tank Centre for Cities says the Government should seize the opportunities posed by the city's growing tech sector after Chancellor Jeremy Hunt announced plans to make Britain the "world's next Silicon Valley" in his autumn statement last month.

In its new report, entitled 'At the frontier: The geography of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's new economy', the think tank calls on MPs to combine these ambitions with the levelling up agenda and prioritise building advanced tech clusters here and also in Manchester and Glasgow.

The trio of three cities were initially chosen as "innovation accelerators" in last February's Levelling Up White Paper.

The 'new economy' describes new high-growth industries considered to be leading the way in technology and which have the potential to be a driving force of growth and productivity.

Centre for Cities said Birmingham was already home to around 38 per cent of the 7,263 new economy firms in the West Midlands and investing to further increase its appeal to these emerging industries would improve productivity, drive economic growth and create more high-skilled jobs.

The think tank wants ministers to fund the plans to set up innovation accelerators in the three cities by creating a £14.5 billion growth package for them over ten years.