The worrying UK divide on research and development expenditure
As various research studies have shown, economies that consistently invest in innovation reap the rewards in higher productivity, better jobs, and stronger exports.
For the UK, innovation matters more than ever and after more than a decade of sluggish productivity, we cannot afford to stand still as competitors improve their economies.
The recent figures on research and development (R&D) expenditure released by the Office for National Statistics show that the picture at the UK level is mixed ,but broadly positive. Total expenditure on R&D performed in the UK reached £72.6bn in 2023, an increase of £3bn compared with 2022 and £14.3bn more than in 2018, which is the first year for which comparable figures are available.
Business continues to dominate R&D activities undertaking £50bn (or 69% of the total) whilst higher education delivered out £17.1bn (24%) and the government sector (including UK Research and Innovation) £4.3bn (6%). Private non-profit organisations spent £1.1bn or 2% of the total. There was also a healthy pipeline of innovation across sectors with business expenditure increasing by £1.4bn, higher education by £900m, and government by £700m.
Yet if the UK overall is moving in the right direction, the regional story tells us just how unevenly this investment is distributed. The so-called ‘golden triangle’ of London, south east England and the east of England together account for more than half of all R&D in........
© BusinessLive
