(11 years, 2 months ago)
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Yes, I agree. Ultimately, we want to see all sectors of the economy grow, and they are all interlinked. Clearly, if manufacturing improves, the services side will also benefit. The reverse does not always work in quite the same way; there is a greater benefit for services when manufacturing succeeds.
As for my personal involvement, I have to confess that in my previous life I had little knowledge of or involvement with manufacturing. My constituency has a significant number of employers in the manufacturing sector that make a major contribution to the local, national and international economies. I recognise the importance of those employers, and I want to support them wherever possible. That is why I became heavily involved with the all-party group on food and drink manufacturing, which is well supported across the House and which I now chair, and with the associated all-party group on manufacturing—I am delighted to see leading members of that group here this afternoon. There is much overlap between those all-party groups and others, and it is useful to have such differentiation because it demonstrates that although there are many similarities between manufacturers, there are also many important differences.
I also congratulate the hon. Gentleman on securing this debate. He will already have realised that there is much cross-party agreement on the importance of manufacturing. I have seen that importance in the past fortnight, when I visited Burgon & Ball in my constituency. The company has been in business for 280 years, and with the help of the Royal Bank of Scotland and the growth fund I hope it will be here for another 280 years.
Will the hon. Gentleman confirm that part of the difficulty for rebalancing and manufacturing is the continuing culture of our banking system? To be fair, the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills endeavours to do something about the banking system, which focuses on short-term returns from manufacturing and business, rather than on long-term investment. We have turned the original intention of the banking system on its head. That intention, which is still reflected in the German model, is that banks are there to serve manufacturing and service industry development, rather than the other way around.
The right hon. Gentleman makes a valid point. I assumed that many people would raise the question of lending, so I have specifically avoided it, but it is good that he has raised the issue.
My simple conclusion is that, if our economy is to rebalance and grow, and if our nation is to prosper, manufacturing must be central to that change.