Tag: csep

UK HealthTech Roadshow Unites Industry, Academia, and Government to Shape MedTech’s Future

The government has placed growth at the heart of its mission and in June of this year
published its Industrial Strategy. One important issue raised by the Industrial Strategy is
the need to better understand the relationship between national sector strategies and
the regional areas where firms are located.

The high-level Sector Plans identified the most important city regions and clusters for
the given sector. In addition, regional authorities are developing ambitious Local Growth
Plans which are supposed to dovetail with the Industrial Strategy Sector Plans. These
local plans need to tackle the critical issues that are constraining growth across sectors
including poor transport connections, skills shortages and housing.

If a sector is to drive growth, it will need to scale up across the regions which means
there needs to be some consistency across locations. For example, there should not be
a diFerent export strategy for HealthTech firms in Yorkshire compared to those in
Scotland; there needs to be one national export strategy for the sector. However,
national sector strategies will have to consider the advantages and disadvantages faced
by each location which will impact multiple sectors. Hence it is critical that national
sector strategies dovetail with regional strategies to support growth across multiple
sectors rather than generating a host of competing strategies which has sometimes
been the case across the UK.

With that in mind, a nationwide series of regional roundtables, jointly hosted by the
Association of British HealthTech Industries (ABHI) and the Centre for Sectoral
Economic Performance (CSEP) at Imperial College London, has brought together
leaders from industry, academia, and government to address the challenges and
opportunities shaping the UK’s £13.5 billion HealthTech sector.

Spanning events in Edinburgh, Oxford, Manchester, and Cardiff, the roadshow
highlighted the sector’s economic strength, innovation potential, and pressing need for
structural reforms to boost productivity, manufacturing, and global competitiveness.

 

A Sector with Global Potential – and Persistent Barriers

According to CSEP’s research, the UK HealthTech industry employs more than 150,000
people and contributes £13–15 billion in Gross Value Added (GVA) annually—on par
with the biopharma sector, despite receiving 15 times less research funding.

University spinouts in HealthTech rival those in pharmaceuticals, underscoring the
sector’s innovation eFiciency.

However, productivity per employee lags global leaders such as Singapore and
Denmark, and the UK remains a net importer of medical technologies. Much of the
country’s manufacturing capacity has migrated overseas, particularly to the US and
Switzerland, limiting domestic economic returns.

 

Three NHS Strategic Shifts Driving Urgency

Speakers, including ABHI’s Richard Phillips and Imperial’s Professor James Moore Jr.,
stressed that NHS sustainability hinges on three strategic shifts:

1. Care closer to home and in the community
2. Digital transformation
3. A stronger focus on prevention

Delivering on these priorities will require rapid adoption of innovative health
technologies—an area where the UK has historically excelled in invention but lagged in
deployment.

 

Policy and Investment Reforms Proposed

Daniel Green, a MedTech entrepreneur and policy adviser, outlined a set of cost-neutral, sector-specific proposals to stimulate growth:

Expand SEIS/EIS limits for life sciences, raising the SEIS cap from £250,000 to
reflect the capital intensity of MedTech ventures.
Reform EMI share schemes so tax benefits remain valid after employees leave,
accommodating long development timelines.
Enhance R&D tax credits for UK-based clinical trials to reverse the UK’s decline
in global rankings (from 4th to 10th).

Attendees agreed these reforms would improve access to capital, attract talent, and
encourage companies to conduct trials domestically.

 

Local Insights from the Regions

Edinburgh: Participants called for better alignment between NHS priorities and
HealthTech innovation, with a focus on health equity and sustainability.
Oxford: Discussions stressed the UK’s need to match its scientific strength with
faster adoption and value realisation in the health system.
Manchester: Stakeholders showcased integrated health data initiatives and the
CityLabs innovation hub, which has created over 800 jobs and £150m in GVA.
Cardiff: Former Welsh Economy Minister Vaughan Gething urged embedding
innovation as a core NHS function, with empowered local leadership and clear
priorities.

 

ABHI’s Role as the Sector’s Voice

ABHI, representing over 400 members (80% SMEs), acts as a bridge between industry
and policymakers, advocating for regulatory clarity, market access, and international
trade growth. Its trade missions span the US, Middle East, and beyond, helping UK
firms access new markets and align with global regulatory standards.

 

Next Steps – From Discussion to Delivery

The roadshow’s findings will feed into a collaborative HealthTech strategy co-authored by ABHI and CSEP, focusing on government policy reform, industry scaling
commitments, and academic innovation pipelines. Attendees were urged to provide
feedback to refine the roadmap.

“This is about more than funding requests,” Moore emphasised. “It’s about a shared
commitment—industry, government, and academia each playing their role—to make
the UK the best place in the world to develop, scale, and export health technologies.”

Using Sector Evidence and Expertise to Improve Medical Technology Regulations, Achieve Better Health Outcomes, and Grow the Economy: CSEP and the UK’s Life Sciences Sector Industrial Strategy

The Centre for Sectoral Economic Performance (CSEP) is a new institute based at Imperial College and funded by the Gatsby Charitable Foundation. CSEP strives to contribute to the UK’s Economic Growth by employing rigorous academic research, the latest scientific and engineering knowledge with bottom-up business informed analysis to create innovative, meaningful and actionable sector strategies to create growth in jobs and economic value add.

CSEP analysis has shown that the UK’s HealthTech sector is one of the country’s hidden gems. The UK HealthTech Sector contributes £13.5 Billion of Gross Value Add (GVA) to the UK economy annually and, since 2016 has grown at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 19%. Wages, turnover and exports associated with the sector have also grown over the 2016-2020 period at CAGR’s in the 14-19% range. Working in partnership with the Association of British HealthTech Industry (ABHI) and the broader HealthTech businesses community, an industry led strategy to further grow the sector has been created. The sector strategy contains a 6-point delivery plan, with clear actions, timelines and goals that ABHI with CSEP support have been executing this year. Roadshows have been held up and down and across the country to share the strategy and to seek further refinements and guidance from the sector.

This year, following the publication of that strategy and subsequent engagement with multiple departments across Whitehall, including briefings to policy teams and roundtables with decision-makers, it was heartening to see the Government in its landmark Life Sciences Sector Industrial Strategy incorporate three of the report’s key recommendations.

1) utilisation of the NHS as a strategic innovation partner

2) provision of greater export support for HealthTech SME’s

3) streamlining regulation and market access.

Of particular importance was the regulatory streamlining where there is an urgent need to reform the UK’s processes for regulating, approving and adopting medical technology and this was a key component of the CSEP/ABHI report. These changes will ensure that NHS patients will have access to the best life-saving technologies as soon as possible, and they also eliminate the need for duplicate approval process that introduce delays and additional costs to the sector and drive an accelerated growth of the HealthTech sector in the UK.

However, though significant and ambitious, and a welcome step from Government, demonstrating its commitment and intent with regards to the Life Sciences sector, the Life Sciences Strategy is just a roadmap. CSEP and ABHI are now engaging with Government and its relevant policy teams, as well as industry more broadly, to support the development of the implementation of the Sector Strategy and its specific proposals. CSEP researchers and academics are in regular dialogue with policy officials to provide evidence and expertise to inform the practical, real-life application of the changes that Government wants to see and will continue to carry-out cutting-edge research into the sector to monitor trends and performance metrics.

Together, these strategies signal a new era of collaborative, sustainable, and inclusive growth — where HealthTech doesn’t just treat illness, but powers national prosperity.


Authors: Dr. Nigel Steward and Professor James Moore, in collaboration with ABHI