26/07/2016
- In this report,
in partnership with Creative England, Nesta has used the latest data and
official definitions to map the creative industries in the UK. Their goal is to
provide a data resource to demonstrate the economic significance of the
creative industries across the country, and inform policies to strengthen them
further.
Findings
- The creative industries are
becoming more important in local economies across the UK. Between 2007 and
2014 they became more important in local business population in 9 out of
every 10 locations.
- We have identified 47 creative
clusters across the UK. London and the South East are important components
of the UK creative industries, but so are the North, Scotland, Wales and
Northern Ireland. These clusters grew their creative employment by
28% between 2007 and 2014
- The UK’s geography of
creativity isn’t only about ‘hip creative cities’. We have also identified
clusters in creative conurbations across the country.
- Creative communities in
different parts of the country are working together across cluster and
administrative boundaries. The geography of the UK creative industries is
an interconnected system.
Policy recommendations
- Support the development of
clusters outside of London and the South East
- Continue efforts to share the
benefits of London’s status as a global creative industries hub across the
UK
- Local Enterprise Partnerships
and universities should consider what more they can do to address the
strengths and weaknesses within their particular area, such as an over
reliance on large firms or growing links between graduate talent pools and
creative clusters
- Networks of UK creative
industries should strive to maintain their global reach.
This work
contains statistical data from ONS which is Crown Copyright. The use of the ONS
statistical data in this work does not imply the endorsement of the ONS in
relation to the interpretation or analysis of the statistical data. This work
uses research datasets which may not exactly reproduce National Statistics
aggregates.
Authors
Juan
Mateos-Garcia and Hasan Bakhshi
Source and
Report: Nesta
UK
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