James Gilmour
@cadastral.bsky.social
Economist/writer; cities, devolution and maps 😀
Absolutely! Would love to see this if you're happy to share 😊
July 3, 2025 at 1:30 PM
Absolutely! Would love to see this if you're happy to share 😊
Absolutely! Limited on time and space for this piece but I'd love to have been able to look into it in more depth (and I think the data is available through ONS regional sectoral GVA estimates?)
July 2, 2025 at 1:27 PM
Absolutely! Limited on time and space for this piece but I'd love to have been able to look into it in more depth (and I think the data is available through ONS regional sectoral GVA estimates?)
Good public transport definitely neccesary but not always sufficient for economic growth - great paper on this from 2023 if you're interested! sites.harvard.edu/uk-regional-...
Economics
March 2023 working paper available here via the Mossavar-Rahmani Center for Business and Government. August 2023 published paper available here (open source) in Contemporary Social Science. Below, we ...
sites.harvard.edu
July 2, 2025 at 12:54 PM
Good public transport definitely neccesary but not always sufficient for economic growth - great paper on this from 2023 if you're interested! sites.harvard.edu/uk-regional-...
Thanks Andy! Hope my attempts to explain productivity get the TPI stamp of approval 😊
July 2, 2025 at 9:29 AM
Thanks Andy! Hope my attempts to explain productivity get the TPI stamp of approval 😊
Whether it's public transport, skills, investment or something else, we should all probably be paying more attention to what's happening in Manchester - there's a lot riding on getting this right (4/4 - full piece free to read!)
manchestermill.co.uk/andrew-mcphi...
manchestermill.co.uk/andrew-mcphi...
The graph that shows Manchester's economy is taking off for real
Our economics analyst James Gilmour has some good news
manchestermill.co.uk
July 2, 2025 at 9:18 AM
Whether it's public transport, skills, investment or something else, we should all probably be paying more attention to what's happening in Manchester - there's a lot riding on getting this right (4/4 - full piece free to read!)
manchestermill.co.uk/andrew-mcphi...
manchestermill.co.uk/andrew-mcphi...
It's very hard to say why for sure - but my personal hunch is that this isn't unrelated to expansion of the tram network, which has seemingly supported rapid jobs growth in the highly productive city centre (3/4)
July 2, 2025 at 9:18 AM
It's very hard to say why for sure - but my personal hunch is that this isn't unrelated to expansion of the tram network, which has seemingly supported rapid jobs growth in the highly productive city centre (3/4)
Economic productivity has nothing to do with hard work; it measures how efficiently we're able to turn time and material into value. But the UK's productivity growth has been anaemic from 2008 on, making us all thousands of pounds worse off.
Manchester, increasingly, is a rare bright spot 👇 (2/4)
Manchester, increasingly, is a rare bright spot 👇 (2/4)
July 2, 2025 at 9:18 AM
Economic productivity has nothing to do with hard work; it measures how efficiently we're able to turn time and material into value. But the UK's productivity growth has been anaemic from 2008 on, making us all thousands of pounds worse off.
Manchester, increasingly, is a rare bright spot 👇 (2/4)
Manchester, increasingly, is a rare bright spot 👇 (2/4)
What else could it be? A new and revived manufacturing hub? More houses? Could the deer even make a return? Or will it stay much the same (spoiler; probably!) (4/4)
manchestermill.co.uk/trafford-par...
manchestermill.co.uk/trafford-par...
Trafford Park is a limbo of warehouses, sheds and roundabouts. What could it be instead?
It was the world's first industrial estate - now it feels like an afterthought
manchestermill.co.uk
March 11, 2025 at 5:41 PM
What else could it be? A new and revived manufacturing hub? More houses? Could the deer even make a return? Or will it stay much the same (spoiler; probably!) (4/4)
manchestermill.co.uk/trafford-par...
manchestermill.co.uk/trafford-par...
At its peak Trafford Park employed 75,000 workers, largely in high-value manufacturing and engineering. But industrial decline, fragmentation and the inexorable rise of logistics gave us the sprawling patchwork of warehouses, low-rise offices and roundabouts you see today (3/4)
March 11, 2025 at 5:41 PM
At its peak Trafford Park employed 75,000 workers, largely in high-value manufacturing and engineering. But industrial decline, fragmentation and the inexorable rise of logistics gave us the sprawling patchwork of warehouses, low-rise offices and roundabouts you see today (3/4)
Barring a council scheduling error, Trafford Park could have stayed a deer park and a vast green lung; something Manchester desperately lacks today. Instead it gave the city something very different; a cutting edge economy for the second industrial revolution (2/4)
March 11, 2025 at 5:41 PM
Barring a council scheduling error, Trafford Park could have stayed a deer park and a vast green lung; something Manchester desperately lacks today. Instead it gave the city something very different; a cutting edge economy for the second industrial revolution (2/4)