On 29th June, Caroline West, Labour MP for Hornsey & Wood Green, asked the Department for Digital, Media and Sport what steps the Government is taking to encourage growth in the creative industries.
Caroline Dinenage, the Minister of State for Digital and Culture in the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, responded to the written question. She answered that the creative industry had contributed approximately £116bn to the UK economy in 2019 and that the government recognises the sector as one of the key sectors to drive growth across the country in the Chancellor’s Plan for Growth.
The government’s full answer is below:
Arts
Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport
29 June 2021
Catherine West: To ask the Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, what steps the Government is taking to encourage growth in the creative industries.
Caroline Dinenage: The creative industries contributed approximately £116bn to the UK economy in 2019. The Government has recognised the sector as one of the key sectors to drive growth across the country in the Chancellor’s Plan for Growth.
We are actively supporting the creative industries through a range of initiatives such as:
- £4m towards the Creative Scale-Up programme which seeks to help creative businesses expand their operations.
- £39m towards the Creative Clusters programme through UKRI which connects businesses and academia to take advantage of the most recent research and innovations so they can grow.
- £33m towards the Audience of the Future which encouraged creative businesses to use innovative new technologies to reach new audiences.
- £20m towards the first round of the Cultural Development Fund to support business growth and productivity through investment in cultural and creative infrastructure via five projects in places like Wakefield and Worcester, in addition to a further £18.5m for a second round as part of the landmark Cultural Investment Fund, launched in May 2021.
- HMG committed over £2m to the Creative Careers Programme which aims to address aspirational and informational barriers to entry amongst young people and their carers. To date over 115,000 young people have engaged with the programme at over 1500 schools in England and Wales.
- Continuing to work with industry through the Creative Industries Trade and Investment Board to increase exports in the creative industries.
- The Government supports trade promotion in the CIs through DIT’s export hubs, the Internationalisation Fund, the Export Academy. All this support will feature in the Creative Industries Export Campaign which will encourage both new exporters and companies wanting to look at new export markets to take advantage of the fantastic opportunities available to the UK as an independent trading nation.
- The Government is also looking carefully at options for an Export Office.