Statistical evidence
Task one- rate of growth in the creative industries.
What is the growth rate in the Creative Industries compared to the rest of the UK economy ?
GVA (gross value added) of the creative industries has increased by 15.6 per cent since 2008, compared with an increase of 5.4 per cent between 2011 and 2012, higher than any of the other main uk industry sectors.
creativeindustries.co.uk
Task two-
statistical evidence which shows how the Creative industries have recovered after the Pandemic AND how this recovery compares to the rest of the UK economy.
An example is
Positive Trend In Economic Recovery Of UK Creative Industries From Pandemic
Updated MAY 4, 2022 PUBLISHED ON: MAY 4, 2022
• Provisional data shows a positive trend in the economic contribution of the UK creative industries in 2021, bouncing back from the fall in Gross Value Added during the first year of the pandemic.
• the sum of the monthly totals of GVA of the creative industries sectors for the calendar year of 2021, is currently about £104bn, compared to about £95bn for the same measure in 2020. The comparable figure for 2019 was just over £107bn
Creative industries continued to power the growth of the UK's workforce last year, adding new posts at twice the rate of the rest of the economy, according to official data.
With an estimated 2,040,000 jobs - 75 per cent of them outside London - the UK's creative industries are developing new jobs faster than other sectors despite record employment in the UK economy as a whole. HYPERLINK "https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/dcms-sectors-economic-estimates-2018-employment"
In 2018 the creative industries grew jobs by 1.6 per cent, compared to the UK-wide employment increase of 0.8 per cent. Between 2011 and 2018, creative industries employment has mushroomed by 30.6 per cent, compared to the UK average growth of 10.1 per cent during that period.
The creative industries account for half a million more jobs than the digital sectors, although there is some overlap between the two in the official data and the intersection of creative skills and technology, known as CreaTech, is one of the most exciting parts of the economy.
In the wider creative economy, which counts creative occupations in other sectors to roles specifically in the creative industries, the total number of UK jobs is 3.2m or 9.6 per cent of all UK jobs (by comparison, the wider digital economy accounts for 2.2m jobs or 6.8 per cent of all roles).
The creative industries will be integral to the UK’s social and economic regeneration.
They are:
A driver of economic growth - previously growing five times faster than the wider economy and in all parts of the UK. They are ready to lead us out of recession.
Job-creating - creating jobs at three times the UK average prior to the outbreak, and providing education and training for young people up and down the country.
A vanguard for the future of work and industry - resistant to automation, built on innovation and with a high number of agile and entrepreneurial freelancers and small businesses.
The essence of ‘brand UK’ - driving tourism, exports and enhancing our soft power abroad.
Instrumental in bringing communities together and fundamental to the nation’s mental health.
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