Author: Lauren Asplin

From biopharma innovation to biopharma impact: Can the UK compete globally in 2025?

Author: Professor James Barlow

In 2024, the UK dropped out of the top ten countries in global manufacturing rankings.[i] The decline reflects long-standing structural weaknesses that stretch back decades, including a lack of coherent industrial strategy and inconsistent policies, inadequate adoption of innovation and productivity-enhancing practices, and insufficient investment in workforce training. These have left many of our manufacturing industries without a solid foundation for global competition. Compounding these challenges, geopolitical shifts have also led to other countries overtaking the UK – Russia’s surge in defence industry spending, a manufacturing boom in Mexico spurred by Chinese investment seeking to bypass US tariffs, and Taiwan’s continued dominance in semiconductor production.

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Supporting the UK’s strengths in aerospace will unlock growth

Author: Professor Rafael Palacios

The UK is one of five countries in the world with the capability to build its own aeroplanes. As an island nation we rely on aerospace more than other countries. So aviation technology here has always developed at pace. We have the third largest sector in the OECD by market share, after the US and France and a healthy pipeline of startup ranging from nanosatellites to large lighter-than-air vehicles. And the operations of companies like Rolls Royce, BAE Systems and Airbus stand as symbols of the sector’s future potential.

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Partnerships between universities and industry will make UK AI a success

Author: Dr. Juan Bernabé-Moreno, Director of Scientific Research in Europe, IBM

As IBM’s Director of Scientific Research in Europe, I know what a huge opportunity the AI Revolution represents for the UK economy. But translating that potential into economic growth and scientific progress requires close collaboration between technology companies and universities. That’s why I was delighted last month to sign a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between IBM and Imperial College London, committing us to work together over the coming years on the application of AI technologies to global problems including climate change.

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