Local government entities are under serious financial pressure, and procurement is tasked with helping to reduce spend.
Analysis of economic vitality across major UK cities to mark the second anniversary of the first UK lockdown has shown that Glasgow has proved most resilient in the face of the pandemic.
The Evaluate|Locate economic vitality index shows that since the start of the first lockdown on 23 March 2020, Glasgow’s rating has risen by 12.2 per cent. The next best performing cities were Liverpool and Southampton with rating rises of 7.3 per cent and 4.9 per cent.
Working from postcode granularity upwards, Evaluate|Locate rates every location across the UK on the basis of 96 economic metrics which are grouped around business density; earnings; employment levels; average residential values; and population movements. Its data set and index dates back to January 2010.
Adam Kirby, head of Data & Insight at JPES Partners, which created the index, said: “Since the first lockdown Glasgow has led the UK in terms of overall economic vitality, driven in large part by the strength of many local businesses through the Covid era and a relatively resilient jobs market. Our new Key Cities Tracker illustrates stark differences between the post-pandemic fates of UK cities. It’s also beginning to highlight the next challenge – a cost of living crunch that is afflicting the whole country. But this too isn’t the same everywhere. We’ve seen earnings struggling to keep up with inflation in many locations during the past six months but less so in others such as Glasgow, Liverpool and Southampton.”
Local government entities are under serious financial pressure, and procurement is tasked with helping to reduce spend.
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