Do you think London is too dominant?

15 March, 20142 Comments
A recent BBC documentary series by Evan Davies – Mind the Gap: London vs the rest – looked at the cultural and economic divide between London and the rest of the UK. Many LARIA members will have followed the discussion with interest as it cuts to the heart of many of the challenges we are facing at a local level. In particular how do we provide the evidence needed to drive economic growth. Key questions discussed subsequently online include:
- Should Hebden Bridge be the UK’s second city?
- Is closing the gap essential if we want a truly United Kingdom?
- Were the five main insights, including the impact of agglomeration, actually overstretching the point?
- Was the programme just lazy sterotyping of a “north” past it’s hayday?
- Have we a national policy regime that not only does not mind the gap, it extends it?
- Should Salford and Trafford call themselves Manchester?
Did you see the show? What do you think of the central argument? What evidence do LARIA members have that either confirm or disprove this argument? How can we help drive economic growth across all parts of the country?
Photo credit: Mind the Gap by Raghavvidya
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I think this report is quite interesting and helps me put into context the flow in and out of London – it’s definitely a certain age group who see London as the place to be.
https://laria.org.uk/?p=2091
I didn’t see the programmes. but have followed some of the debate. To some extent it’s only right that our capital is dominant so we’re competing successfully at a global level. But meanwhile back in the UK, an increasingly extended gap is worrying. And whether it’s places or people, inequality is a big issue (the latest from The Equality Trust cites the social and economic impact of inequality as costing us the equivalent of £39 billion every year).
I’m a Northerner, I love the North and can see a lot of potential here. And we need to make the most of opportunities. This summer, Yorkshire plays host to the Grand Depart of the Tour de France – but it’s not just a bike race, the 100 days leading up to the event will showcase music, dance, theatre, sculpture and many other art forms – check out festival.yorkshire.com