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Is UK manufacturing turning a corner?

Whisper it quietly but there are signs of a rebound in orders and production in UK manufacturing industry. In recent weeks we have seen a cluster of articles suggesting that some of the industrial production that left the UK during an age of out-sourcing is now starting to return home. Having plunged last year manufacturing output appears to have stabilised and today we heard news from the Chartered Institute of Purchasing & Supply’s purchasing managers’ index that UK manufacturing activity grew at its fastest pace in more than two years in December 2009.

Last week, a survey by the Engineering Employers Federation revealed that one in seven British companies had repatriated manufacturing operations to the UK in the past two years. Keep in mind that manufacturing contributes less than 12% of UK GDP - although many service sector jobs and businesses depend directly on the health of the industrial sector. Manufacturing may be making a comeback because of:

1/ Sterling: The weaker value of sterling against the Euro and the US dollar has given manufacturing industry a competitive boost

2/ Relative costs and supply issues: Higher than expected costs and quality problems have been cited by some businesses that have outsourced some manufacturing - high wage inflation in fast-growing emerging market countries has narrowed some of the unit labour cost gap between the UK and rivals

3/ Oil and transport costs: The high price of oil has increased the cost of shipping goods around the world encouraging producers to focus output closer to the market

4/ Overseas markets: Signs of a recovery in some of the UK’s main export markets - the majority of manufacturing production in the UK is exported, manufacturing industry in Britain is sensitive to the global economic cycle

Sunday Times (3rd Jan) Made in Britain: How manufacturing is returning to the UK

Scotsman: 15% of British firms switching production back to UK

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