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Scotland's engine room may be on brink of seizing up



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Published Date: 10 January 2009
THIS is a candid admission from Andrew Murphy, general manager of John Lewis in Scotland. His warnings about the poor prospects for the Edinburgh store will set the alarm bells ringing, not just across the retail sector, but the city as a whole. And the loudest bells of all should go off at Edinburgh City Council.
The assessment that Edinburgh is expected to be hit harder by the economic downturn than anywhere in Scotland will deepen the fears of many that there is worse – much worse – news to come.

Senior officials at Edinburgh City Council have been brac
ed for weeks that a shake-out of jobs, not just at HBOS and Royal Bank of Scotland but right across the financial sector – IT workers, asset management, global custody and document printing together with specialist legal and accountancy services – would have a major impact on economic growth in the city region.

Add to this the knock-on effects on the broader service sector – restaurants, hotels, taxi firms, clothes stores, furnishers and household services – and the crisis at the banks could ripple out into a growth implosion for the city overall.

Since a detailed report was prepared in October, the economy has deteriorated sharply, with a generalised loss of confidence spreading across the service and retail sectors.

This in turn bodes ill for city hall revenues if – as some have warned – one in ten retail businesses could be closed down by the recession.

The bleak report by Dave Anderson, director of economic development for Edinburgh City Council, set out the potential extent of the damage that could be done to the capital as a result of the financial sector shake-out.

It warned that Edinburgh, widely seen as the engine room of Scotland's economy, was especially vulnerable.

The financial sector in Edinburgh employs some 30,000 – one in ten of the capital's workforce. It is also reckoned to support a further 53,000 jobs in the city.

The future of the financial sector in the city is seen as key to the delivery of some £7.5 billion worth of developments, which had been widely expected to take place, including the regeneration of the city's waterfront, an overhaul of Princes Street and the expansion of Edinburgh Airport.

Mr Anderson said: "The finance sector is a major pillar of Edinburgh's economy, both in terms of wealth creation and employment.

"As Edinburgh has an abundance of major financial institutions, structural changes among these businesses are likely to have significant repercussions on the city and its economy."

He said the extent to which the local economy would be affected by the Lloyds TSB take over of HBOS was unclear – estimates of job losses across Scotland range from 20,000 up to 60,000 – "but there is a significant risk of a medium-term negative impact on jobs and the ability for businesses to acquire capital for growth.

"Following the takeover of Scottish & Newcastle by the Heineken-Carlsberg consortium, the loss of a second major headquarters in a year for the capital could also affect Edinburgh's reputation as a desirable head-office location."

Recent months have seen visible signs of economic slowdown in the city's property and development market.

The property analyst David Alexander, owner of Edinburgh-based firm DJ Alexander, said: "We are seeing the kind of downturn in Edinburgh at the moment that we haven't seen for more than 20 years.

"Edinburgh is so reliant on financial services that when it takes a hit, it is clearly going to have an impact on the whole economy of the city."





The full article contains 604 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 09 January 2009 9:12 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Credit Crunch
 
1

Forward not Back,

10/01/2009 00:39:13
#1 - while you can rightly point fingers at Brown and co, the middle finger needs to be pointed at Goodwin and Hornby. They precipitated the disasters at their own companies by making stupid decisions.
2

Gorach,

Oban 10/01/2009 01:53:31
SNP
3

,

10/01/2009 06:39:47
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
4

Hermitage,

Edinburgh 10/01/2009 07:59:57
Ah.......the great conspiracy theory added to the Scottish whinge and cringe brigade.

Plus all the hot air and rubbish talked by our Great Leader of the SNP, and the wee Pretendy-Parly.
5

Navvy,

10/01/2009 08:58:51
This is only indirectly a government caused matter in that they allowed the banks greed to run on.

The responsibility for the demise of RBS and the Bank of Scotland lies firmly with greedy management and highly culpable corporate shareholders.
6

For Scotlands Future,

Vote for the SNP 10/01/2009 09:33:12
Tie and Trams: Edinburgh Burning while the council fiddles. How long before someone does an honest assessment as to whether the Council can continue with this. Revenue will drop and what is TIE going to do, take Edinburgh to court and get it declared bankrupt??

#8
Agreed. The world of stocks, shares and the trading markets are the complete opposite of the real world. A company gets rid of thousands of workers and their stock goes up. They take on Billions in debt and their stock goes up. the market analysts are bemoaning the low cost of fuel as it hurts Energy stocks.

I've also noticed that companies are shedding jobs, forecasting a drop in revenues for 2009 - BUT THEY WILL MAINTAIN THEIR DIVIDENDS TO SHAREHOLDERS.

This is the world of Maggie Brown and Westminster - totally opposed to and unrelated to the real world. When he finally gets kicked out, Maggie Brown and the rest will get inflation protected pensions and nice fat jobs in the companies they bailed out with out tax money.
7

Scythia,

10/01/2009 10:39:41
The retail the "Engine room", anybody else see the travesty here - Engine, Engineering or the complete lack.
8

livilion,

livingston 10/01/2009 11:26:28
Market forces old bean, everyone for themselves.

We can now salute the Edinburgh City Fathers for their foresight in improving their city's carbon footprint.

By making the city center unattractive to poor folk and for vehicles driven by those with insufficient disposable income, they can reduce the effects of people living or working in Edinburgh by exporting them out to greener areas outwith their dominion.

Thereby they leave the good folks of Crammond, Currie, Balerno and Barnton etc to enjoy their new tramset in peace and the ladies who dine to get to their lunches at Harvie Nic's without having to mingle with the help.

A few years of building work along the main shopping streets can also expect to help speed up getting shot of those 'less desirable' shop fronts for the antiques boutiques, interior designers and solicitors' offices that no green wellie or Pink shirt brigader village should be without.
9

Logie Almond,

10/01/2009 12:36:50
The positive side of the credit crunch in Edinburgh is that it may save us from planning disasters such as "Caltongate" and the Haymarket tower.
10

Martyk,

10/01/2009 13:24:47
Were Scotland an independent nation would it have had the financial muscle to save HBOS and RBS ? The ROI has stumped up 10 Billion euro to strengthen the Irish banks entirely from their National Reserve Fund accumalated in the good times. We havent got any sort of reserve fund. What we would have done is borrow it I suppose . Or let them collapse completely. Unthinkable either way.
11

Mcsnagpile,

10/01/2009 14:11:24
The Edinburgh property had the highest percentage fall in UK last month. Not a mention about that.
The rivets are go'in tae blow cap'n. Jist hing on tae yer hollyhocks Spotty.

Maybe A'll be able tae afford a hoose back in Ediburrai.
12

The Former Mr. Angry,

Perth 10/01/2009 17:31:06
Just shows that the drive to shut down engineering and other manufacturers in favour of financial and intellectual jobs was a mistake. We need a diversity of employment to take up the slack of a shock in one or more major sectors but that elasticity has gone.

Nonetheless there's far too much doom and gloom around. We need to be thinking in terms of solutions to this problem, not over-accentuating the problems. More reporting along these lines might help to bring back some confidence to markets and prevent people from inventing disasters where they don't exist.

For example there must be a market for more coal either to create gas or to fire power stations - about 200 years worth. Mines must be becoming financially viable again following the vast prices increases in fuel.

 

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