The Guardian view on Greater Manchester’s Atom Valley plan: growth outside the city | Editorial

A project to revive the economic fortunes of former mill towns can be a model for the rest of the country

The inventor of the flying shuttle, the 18th-century innovation that transformed textile production and helped Manchester earn the nickname Cottonopolis, actually came from Bury. By the late Victorian period, John Kay’s home town and neighbouring Rochdale and Oldham were all renowned hubs of textile manufacture, while Manchester had become a globally important cotton trading hub. What contemporary economics would call an agglomeration effect – a kind of virtuous circle of growth driven by new methods and investment – spread growth across the region.

The contrast with modern Greater Manchester is stark. Partly as a result of a property investment and services boom, much of the city of Manchester has thrived in recent years. But the end of coal and cotton in the 20th century saw former mill and mining towns struggle to find a new role, and too much work in such places remains restricted to low-wage, low-skill jobs.

This is, of course, not a phenomenon confined to the north-west, or to the north as a whole. Beyond the south-east, the city-led “trickle-out” growth model in vogue during the first part of the 21st century has generally failed to deliver beyond urban centres. An attempt by the mayor of the Greater Manchester combined authority, Andy Burnham, to address these issues is therefore of more than merely regional interest.

In an interview last week with Larry Elliott, the Guardian’s economics editor, Mr Burnham emphasised that Greater Manchester’s devolution could deliver more for places like Oldham and Rochdale. To that end, he is backing an ambitious plan – dubbed Atom Valley in homage to Manchester’s role in splitting the atom – aimed at establishing a hi-tech manufacturing and research hub in the north of Greater Manchester. The aspiration is to establish a 21st-century cluster effect, encouraging inward investment from major advanced manufacturing companies and potentially creating 20,000 jobs.

This is the kind of project that needs to succeed for political and social reasons as well as economic ones. Unacceptably high levels of regional and intra-regional levels of inequality are part of the national story of anaemic growth, low productivity and stagnant pay. But it is also now a truism of British politics that a sense of marginalisation in such places has made the country a corrosively divided place.

There is no good reason why Britain’s underpowered research and development base should be disproportionately located in the south-east and around Cambridge. And in places such as Rochdale and Oldham, a flourishing relationship between properly funded technical colleges and local hi-tech manufacturers would transform communities that have become both older and relatively poorer. A new powerhouse of innovation, smartly situated in a region globally associated with the Industrial Revolution, would also find synergies with the groundbreaking scientific research at Manchester’s universities.

Mr Burnham’s vision deserves Westminster’s backing – and the kind of public money and devolved powers needed to attract investors, transform the local skills base and upgrade transport links. The former Bank of England chief economist Andy Haldane has witheringly criticised the government over its lack of a meaningful plan for growth. Atom Valley not only delivers one at a regional level; it also offers a template to deal with socioeconomic faultlines, which a politics dedicated to the common good must address.

Contributor

Editorial

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
The Guardian view on buses: power to the passengers | Editorial
Editorial: Ever since they were deregulated, profits have come first. Manchester mayor Andy Burnham must now push back

Editorial

20, Jun, 2019 @5:43 PM

Article image
The Guardian view on Johnson and Greater Manchester: the politics of a pandemic | Editorial
Editorial: The government talks of unity but its handling of coronavirus is further dividing the country

Editorial

20, Oct, 2020 @6:36 PM

Article image
The Guardian view on Covid failures: PM eroded trust when he needed it most | Editorial
Editorial: Boris Johnson’s inept handling of the pandemic has risked undermining his claim to level up the country’s poorest regions and forced him to ask local leaders for help

Editorial

12, Oct, 2020 @6:31 PM

Article image
The Guardian view on Tory economics: for haves, not for have-nots | Editorial
Editorial: Whoever is the next prime minister will likely resurrect a form of capitalism that almost broke the economy in 2008

Editorial

17, Jul, 2022 @5:30 PM

Article image
The Guardian view on Westminster and devolution: cede real control
Incompetence in the centre is proving the need for more powerful and more accountable local politicians

Editorial

28, Oct, 2020 @6:30 PM

Article image
The Guardian view on UK Covid-19 coordination: work together, save lives | Editorial
Editorial: The four-nations approach works better than countries taking different paths. It is time to rebuild a collective approach to fighting the virus

Editorial

17, May, 2020 @5:30 PM

Article image
The Guardian view on the northern powerhouse: back on | Editorial
Editorial: As Andy Burnham, the Greater Manchester mayor, convenes a northern council in Leeds, Theresa May heads to Teesside. It looks as if the battle for northern England has begun

Editorial

23, Aug, 2017 @6:02 PM

Article image
The Guardian view on Britain out of the EU: a treasure island for rentiers | Editorial
Editorial: There’s no sign that ministers will use the twin shocks of the pandemic and Brexit to fix a broken system that is failing too many people

Editorial

27, Dec, 2020 @3:23 PM

Article image
The Guardian view on Marcus Rashford's triumph: a political masterclass | Editorial
Editorial: By persuading the government to extend the free meal voucher scheme, the Manchester United footballer has taught the prime minister a lesson on solidarity

Editorial

16, Jun, 2020 @5:31 PM

Article image
The Guardian view on clean air zones: cities must be bold | Editorial
Editorial: As evidence about the harmful effects of pollution mounts, mayors need to take action to reduce emissions and improve health

Editorial

18, Sep, 2018 @5:30 PM