Mayor Khan Backs Making It
London Mayor Sadiq Khan poised to back GMB 'Making It' campaign
Mayor to sign union charter backing manufacturing jobs as new analysis shows sector employs 110,000 workers and brings £8.5 billion boost to London economy
A major union campaign to support manufacturing jobs is today set to win the backing of Mayor of London Sadiq Khan.
The Mayor will join GMB union activists at a City Hall event this morning, where he will formally back the union's campaign to support manufacturing jobs by signing the union’s ‘Making It’ charter [1].
It comes as new GMB analysis reveals manufacturing employs 110,000 workers in the capital, boosting the London economy by £8.5 billion a year [2].
Food manufacturing is now the largest manufacturing sub-sector in London, employing 24,000 people. Other significant manufacturing strands in the capital include fabricated metal products (14,000 jobs), printing and reproduction of recorded media (10,000 jobs), wearing apparel (6,000 jobs) and computer, electronic and optical products (5,000 jobs).
Among the top manufacturing hot spots around London are Ealing (13,000 jobs with a £765 million boost), Harrow and Hillingdon (10,000 jobs and a £891 million boost), Barking, Dagenham and Havering (8,500 jobs and a £923 million boost) and Brent (8,000 jobs and a £576 million boost). [3 - see noted to editors for full London-wide breakdown]
Jude Brimble, GMB National Secretary said:
“It is too often wrongly said that we don’t make anything here anymore. Our Making It campaign reveals the truth about manufacturing and celebrates the work GMB members proudly do every day.
“We are delighted to have the Mayor’s backing for our ambitious charter to support manufacturing jobs in London, with this diverse sector supporting more than a hundred thousand livelihoods and bringing billions into the capital.
“At a time when insecure work and the so-called ‘gig-economy’ are growing, manufacturing workers are often skilled workers in full-time employment and on permanent contracts. Wages in manufacturing are on average 20 per cent higher than in the wider economy - these jobs are worth fighting for.”
Shaun Graham, GMB London Region Senior Organiser said:
"The idea behind the Making It campaign is to bring together the industrial and political agendas in support of UK manufacturing.
“GMB wants to ensure that our members who work in manufacturing, businesses and politicians are aligned to a positive vision of UK manufacturing for now and into the future.
“We know from the Government Impact Assessment that UK manufacturing will potentially experience significant negative impacts as a result of Brexit, so this cooperation is more important than ever.
“The potential impact on the UK food industry is of particular concern for GMB London and thousands of our members who work in food production in North West London - any adverse impacts will have a massive impact on those workers and their tight knit communities.
“GMB is committed to ensure that we have a voice in the future of manufacturing with regards to having the right skills, training and apprenticeships in place."
ENDS
GMB Press Office on 07958 156846 or at press.office@gmb.org.uk
NOTES TO EDITORS
[1]
Making It - London will take place on Wednesday 14 March – City Hall, London from 09:00am, Photo call at 10:10am
For media event access and queries, please contact Michael Pidgeon, Mayor of London’s Press Office - 020 7983 4596 / 07849 077 501 / michael.pidgeon@london.gov.uk
For more details of GMB’s 'Making It' campaign - https://www.making-it.org.uk/
Watch our film about manufacturing in the UK (featuring Henry Poole of Savile Row – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mM7CjWJLekM
Through the Making It campaign, GMB's charter calls for:
· Invest in manufacturing - the Government must create an environment that encourages manufacturing employers to invest
· Buying for Britain – we need a procurement strategy that supports UK industries
· Trade deals that deliver for workers and industry, and avoid damaging tariffs
· Build strong UK-based supply chains to support local communities
· Equality and inclusion - tackle barriers to work wherever they exist
· A balanced energy policy that keeps the lights on and the production lines moving
[2]
London Region manufacturing economic contribution and employment statistics
Contribution to local and regional economies, annual Gross Value Added (£millions)[i]
Manufacturing |
|
London |
8,475 |
Manufacturing employment – regional and local[ii]
Area |
Jobs |
London |
110,000 |
Top five manufacturing industries by employment
London |
Jobs |
Food |
24,000 |
Fabricated metal products (excluding machinery and equipment) |
14,000 |
Printing and reproduction of recorded media |
10,000 |
Wearing apparel |
6,000 |
Computer, electronic and optical products |
5,000 |
London manufacturing economic value and employment
Gross Value Added and manufacturing employment at Nomenclature of Territorial Units for Statistics 3 (NUTS3) level
NUTS3 |
GVA (£s) |
Manufacturing employment |
Camden and City of London |
491 |
7,500 |
Westminster |
379 |
4,000 |
Kensington & Chelsea and Hammersmith & Fulham |
288 |
3,000 |
Wandsworth |
123 |
1,750 |
Hackney and Newham |
565 |
5,250 |
Tower Hamlets |
259 |
3,500 |
Haringey and Islington |
383 |
6,000 |
Lewisham and Southwark |
245 |
3,150 |
Lambeth |
90 |
1,250 |
Bexley and Greenwich |
535 |
7,500 |
Barking & Dagenham and Havering |
923 |
8,500 |
Redbridge and Waltham Forest |
374 |
5,250 |
Enfield |
441 |
5,000 |
Bromley |
126 |
3,000 |
Croydon |
101 |
3,000 |
Merton, Kingston upon Thames and Sutton |
282 |
6,250 |
Barnet |
162 |
2,500 |
Brent |
576 |
8,000 |
Ealing |
765 |
13,000 |
Harrow and Hillingdon |
891 |
10,000 |
Hounslow and Richmond upon Thames |
476 |
5,000 |
[i] ONS, Regional Gross Value Added (incomes approach) tables
[ii] ONS, UK Business Register and Employment Survey (BRES), data is for 2016 (October 2017 update)