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(单词翻译:双击或拖选)
Professional and business services
To the rescue
Britain's new champions are bean-counters and PowerPoint artists
IN HIS budget speech in 2011, George Osborne, the chancellor1 of the exchequer2, laid out a new vision for Britain's economy.
Finance would no longer race ahead of other sectors3; a “march of the makers” would see manufacturing resurge.
Three years later, the economy is rebalancing—but not as he thought it would.
As expected, Britain's financial-services industry remains4 sickly.
It employs 56,000 fewer people than before the crisis,
according to a report published on March 31st by the Confederation of British Industry, an umbrella group, and PwC, an accountancy firm.
Nor are financial services rebounding5 as the economy recovers.
Figures from the Financial Conduct Authority, a regulator, suggest that, excluding back-office jobs,
the number of bankers has fallen by more than 10% since the crisis, reaching the lowest figure for a decade in 2013.
Manufacturing is starting to return.
Yet on April 8th the Office for National Statistics said that factory output is still 8.2% lower than in 2008.
Industrial closures have continued since the end of the recession—Dunlop,
a tyremaker, says it will close its factory in Birmingham next month after 125 years of production in the city.
Though industries such as carmaking are reviving, that may be more thanks to falling wages than to increased productivity.
Instead, professional and business services are picking up the slack (see chart).
Firms in this industry—which includes accountants and consultants6 as well as outfits7 that run call centres and other stuff essential to businesses—now contribute 27% more to GDP than at the start of the recovery,
and have increased staff numbers by 13%. Management consultancies have done particularly well.
Their revenues have grown by 24% since the crisis, according to Alan Leaman of the MCA, an industry body.
That has encouraged accountancy and legal firms to get into the whiteboards-and-flipcharts business too.
Much of the new demand is from abroad, says David Sproul, the boss of Deloitte, an accountancy firm.
Business-services exports have risen 21% since the recovery began.
Britain's trade surplus in services has doubled to 5% of GDP—the second-largest in the world, after America's.
Architects now earn over 50% more from exports than they did in 2009. Around half of the world's legal exports are British.
Many new clients are in Asia and the Middle East, where Britain's professional services are valued even more highly than its financial ones.
This success is reshaping both the capital and the country.
So many accountants and consultants now throng8 the streets around Shoe Lane,
in central London, that some have taken to calling it “Deloitte town”.
Large business-services clusters mean the economies of London and Manchester are probably performing better than those of Edinburgh and Leeds,
which rely more on finance, says Richard Holt at Capital Economics, a consultancy.
And more British manufacturers are selling services with their products, according to Tim Baines at Aston University.
Boosters speak awkwardly of “manuservicing”, but they may have a point.
Rolls-Royce now earns more from tasks such as managing clients' procurement9 strategies and maintaining the aerospace10 engines it sells than it does from making them.
Cynics say box-tickers have benefited lavishly11 from the weighty stacks of regulation that have been pumped out since the crisis.
But whereas earnings12 from finance and manufacturing are volatile13, a bigger business-services industry should steady the economy.
Since 1985 the sector's share of output has grown almost every year, according to the Work Foundation, a think-tank.
It even created jobs during the recession. Bean-counting and data-mining are not glamorous14 occupations. But they do pay the bills.
1 chancellor | |
n.(英)大臣;法官;(德、奥)总理;大学校长 | |
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2 exchequer | |
n.财政部;国库 | |
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3 sectors | |
n.部门( sector的名词复数 );领域;防御地区;扇形 | |
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4 remains | |
n.剩余物,残留物;遗体,遗迹 | |
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5 rebounding | |
蹦跳运动 | |
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6 consultants | |
顾问( consultant的名词复数 ); 高级顾问医生,会诊医生 | |
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7 outfits | |
n.全套装备( outfit的名词复数 );一套服装;集体;组织v.装备,配置设备,供给服装( outfit的第三人称单数 ) | |
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8 throng | |
n.人群,群众;v.拥挤,群集 | |
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9 procurement | |
n.采购;获得 | |
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10 aerospace | |
adj.航空的,宇宙航行的 | |
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11 lavishly | |
adv.慷慨地,大方地 | |
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12 earnings | |
n.工资收人;利润,利益,所得 | |
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13 volatile | |
adj.反复无常的,挥发性的,稍纵即逝的,脾气火爆的;n.挥发性物质 | |
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14 glamorous | |
adj.富有魅力的;美丽动人的;令人向往的 | |
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