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SME POLICY FORUM SCOTLAND’S EXPERIENCE Professor David Deakins Massey University
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SME POLICY FORUM SCOTLAND’S EXPERIENCE

Jan 16, 2016

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SME POLICY FORUM SCOTLAND’S EXPERIENCE. Professor David Deakins Massey University. Contents. Key demographics Policy issues Enterprise policy in Scotland Ethnic minority enterprise as a case example Recent policy Conclusions. Key Demographics. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: SME POLICY FORUM SCOTLAND’S EXPERIENCE

SME POLICY FORUM

SCOTLAND’S EXPERIENCE

Professor David Deakins

Massey University

Page 2: SME POLICY FORUM SCOTLAND’S EXPERIENCE

Contents

• Key demographics

• Policy issues

• Enterprise policy in Scotland

• Ethnic minority enterprise as a case example

• Recent policy

• Conclusions

Page 3: SME POLICY FORUM SCOTLAND’S EXPERIENCE

Key Demographics

Population: 5.06 m. 2001 Census, 5.41 m. 2009

Age Structure

Area: 78,772 km2 Population density 64 per km2

Page 4: SME POLICY FORUM SCOTLAND’S EXPERIENCE

Age Structure

Page 5: SME POLICY FORUM SCOTLAND’S EXPERIENCE

Geographical Distribution

Population density by area (Persons per km2)

Source: GROS 2006 locality estimates.

Page 6: SME POLICY FORUM SCOTLAND’S EXPERIENCE

Ethnicity

All people

White Indian Pakistani & other S. Asian

Chinese

Other

5062011 4960334

15037 39970 16310 30360

100% 97.99% 0.30% 0.79% 0.32% 0.60%

Source: Scottish Census GROS (www.scrol.gov.uk)

Page 7: SME POLICY FORUM SCOTLAND’S EXPERIENCE

Key Economic Data

Birth rate 10.7 per 000

Death rate 11.0 per 000

Net migration rate + 4.1 per 000

Population growth rate 0.4%

Life expectancy M 74.2; F 79.3

GVA per head £19,152 (2007 est.)

Average gross weekly wage

£461.8 (2008)

Top exports Food/drink/chemicals/wholesale/retail/tourism/bus services/manf.

Destination for exports EU/North America

No of businesses (2008)

154,840 registered282,330 est. total

Page 8: SME POLICY FORUM SCOTLAND’S EXPERIENCE

Size Distribution of Enterprises (2008)

Size Number Total Scottish

Employment

Turnover £m

0-49 employees

276,325 780,510 £63.1

50 to 249 employees

3,600 254, 930 £27.9

250 or more employees

2,405 1,506,310 £152,334

Source: Scottish Government, ONS (IDBR)

Page 9: SME POLICY FORUM SCOTLAND’S EXPERIENCE

Policy Issues: Two Agencies

1. Scottish Enterprise (SE): regional development agency covering Central Belt and South of Scotland

2. Highlands and Islands Enterprise (HIE)

Page 10: SME POLICY FORUM SCOTLAND’S EXPERIENCE

Scotland’s Enterprise Support Agencies

Scottish Enterprise

Highlands and Islands Enterprise

Page 11: SME POLICY FORUM SCOTLAND’S EXPERIENCE

Policy Issues

• Low Business Birth Rate or entrepreneurial activity rates compared to rest of UK (c. 50% of rates in London, GEM 2008 TEA for Scotland = 4.5, compared to 5.6 for UK)

Page 12: SME POLICY FORUM SCOTLAND’S EXPERIENCE

Business Birth Rates UK Regions (2006)

Source: Scottish Enterprise, BIS

VAT registrations per 10,000 adults, 2006

0

10

20

30

40

50

60London

S E

ast

East

S W

est

E M

idla

nds

W M

idla

nds

N I

rela

nd

N W

est

York

s/H

um

ber

Scotland

Wale

s

Nort

h E

ast

UK

Page 13: SME POLICY FORUM SCOTLAND’S EXPERIENCE

Policy Issues

• Low Business Birth Rate or entrepreneurial activity rates compared to rest of UK (c. 50% of rates in London, GEM 2008 TEA for Scotland = 4.5, compared to 5.6 for UK)

• Reliance on traditional, but declining manufacturing sectors, particularly in the Central Belt

• Declining natural resources; e.g., North Sea oil and gas

• World class scientific research centres, but historically low rates of commercial spin-outs

• Rural enterprise: large rural areas in Highlands and Islands and in the South of Scotland

Page 14: SME POLICY FORUM SCOTLAND’S EXPERIENCE

Scotland’s Economic Performance

Low growth economy

“For over 30 years, Scotland has suffered because our economy has been locked into a low growth economy”Government Economic Strategy (2009), Scottish Government

“From 1975 to 2005, Scotland’s annual average growth in GDP was 1.8%, compared to a UK average of 2.3% over the same period”. Innovation for Scotland Report (2009), Scottish Government

Page 15: SME POLICY FORUM SCOTLAND’S EXPERIENCE

Enterprise Policy in Scotland

The Business Birth Rate Strategy (SE) 1993-2003

Volume v targeted support (HIE v SE)

Business networks (SE and HIE): Entrepreneurial ExchangeLINC Scotland

Commercialisation Strategy (SE) 1995 ---

Women’s Enterprise (SE and HIE): National Unit for Women’s Enterprise 2005--

Enterprise Education programme: Determined to Succeed

Page 16: SME POLICY FORUM SCOTLAND’S EXPERIENCE

Ethnic Minority Enterprise as a Case Example

• Scottish Government commissioned national scoping study 2005

• Methodology

• Demographics guided research

• Map MEBs geographical and sectoral distribution in Scotland compared to a white control group

Page 17: SME POLICY FORUM SCOTLAND’S EXPERIENCE

Self-Employment Rates for all Scotland (Per Cent)

0 5 1 0 1 5 2 0 2 5 3 0

A l l

P a k is ta n i

C h in e s e

In d ia n

B a n g la d e s h i

C a r ib b e a n

A fr ic a n

Source: 2001 Census Analysis: General Register Office for Scotland

Page 18: SME POLICY FORUM SCOTLAND’S EXPERIENCE

Self-Employment Rates for Glasgow (Per Cent)

0 5 10 15 20 25

All

African

Bangladeshi

Caribbean

Chinese

Indian

Pakistani

Source: 2001 Census Analysis: General Register Office for Scotland

Page 19: SME POLICY FORUM SCOTLAND’S EXPERIENCE

Self-Employment Rates for Edinburgh (Per Cent)

0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35

All

African

Caribbean

Bangladeshi

Chinese

Indian

Pakistani

Source: 2001 Census Analysis: General Register Office for Scotland

Page 20: SME POLICY FORUM SCOTLAND’S EXPERIENCE

Self-Employment Rates for Highland Scotland including Western Isles and Orkney & Shetland (Per Cent)

0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35

All

African

Bangladeshi

Caribbean

Chinese

Indian

Pakistani

Source: 2001 Census Analysis: General Register Office for Scotland

Page 21: SME POLICY FORUM SCOTLAND’S EXPERIENCE

Selected Key Findings

• Strength and diversity of ethnic minority enterprise in Scotland –, 4,500 businesses contributed upwards £1 billion to GDP

• Concentration by sector and location but key contribution outside cities in Central Belt and rural areas

• Innovation and resourcefulness of MEB owners

• Diversity a source of creativity and innovation

Page 22: SME POLICY FORUM SCOTLAND’S EXPERIENCE

Selected Key Findings

• Low access to formal sources of finance

• Lack of trusted intermediaries between banks and MEB communities

• Lack of engagement with formal mainstream sources of advice and support and a low take-up of training. This includes:

-----------lack of awareness-----------strategies to avoid engagement

• Requires strategies to build trust

Page 23: SME POLICY FORUM SCOTLAND’S EXPERIENCE

Policy Response

• SE and HIE Strategy to engage with ethnic minority businesses

-----engage with communities------support for access to finance------ethnic media and communication

• Scottish Institute for Minority Enterprise –owned and driven by ethnic minority business owners

Page 24: SME POLICY FORUM SCOTLAND’S EXPERIENCE

Recent Policy

• Removing barriers

• Scottish Co-investment Fund• Scottish Seed Fund• Scottish Venture Fund

• Supporting Innovation (R&D Grants, Innovation Vouchers)

• Innovation Strategy, June 2009

Page 25: SME POLICY FORUM SCOTLAND’S EXPERIENCE

Supporting Growth Firms

• Standard business support through Business Gateway (now devolved from Scottish Enterprise to the local authorities/councils)

• Targeted support for ‘growth firms’ by SE (but less so by HIE due to rural environment)

SE criteria (2009) : - £5m valuation by end of year 3,

- commitment to trade globally, - passion to succeed

Page 26: SME POLICY FORUM SCOTLAND’S EXPERIENCE

Conclusions

• SMEs have raised awareness of enterprise agencies, but still dependent on support delivered now by local councils

• Finance initiatives have been more successful, especially local micro-credit, LINC Scotland and Co-investment Fund

• Gaps still exist: KT in rural areas/ethnic minority support

• Frequent changes in policy –lack of consistency

• Disparities in support, funding and investment