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Economy of Sheffield

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Economy of Sheffield
Sheffield Central Business District
Statistics
Population573,252 (2023)[1]
GDP£19.1 billion (2023)[1]
GDP per capita
£33,234 (2023)[1]

In 2008,Sheffield ranked among the top 10 UK cities as a business location[2] and aims to regenerate itself as a moderntechnology andsports based city.Sheffield has an international reputation formetallurgy andsteel-making. It was this industry that established it as one ofEngland's main industrial cities during the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries. This industry used Sheffield's unique combination of localIron,Coal and water power supplied by the local rivers. This fuelled a massive growth in the city's population that expanded from 60,995 in 1801 to a peak of 577,050 in 1951. However, due to increasing competition from imports, it has seen a decline in heavy engineering industries since the 1960s, which has forced the sector to streamline its operations and lay off the majority of the local employment. The steel industry now concentrates on more specialist steel-making and, in 2005, produced more steel per year by value than at any other time in its history.[3] The industry is now less noticeable as it has become highly automated and employs far fewer staff than in the past. However a small number of skilledindustrial automation engineers still thrive in it. Today the economy is worth over £7 billion a year.[4]

The largest employers are now allpublic sector: the two universities, NHS, and national and local government employees. Private fee-payinginternational students are also a major source (£120 million per year) of income to the local economy through the universities.

History

[edit]

The steel industry dates back to at least the 14th century. In 1740Benjamin Huntsman discovered thecrucible technique for steel manufacture, at his workshop in the district ofHandsworth. This process had an enormous impact on the quantity and quality of steel production and was only made obsolete, a century later, in 1856 byHenry Bessemer's invention of theBessemer converter which allowed the true mass production of steel. Bessemer had moved his Bessemer Steel Company to Sheffield to be at the heart of the industry.Thomas Boulsover inventedSheffield Plate (silver-plated copper), in the early 18th century. A major Sheffield steel invention was that ofstainless steel byHarry Brearley in 1912, and the work of Profs.F. B. Pickering and T. Gladman throughout the 1960s, '70s, and '80s was fundamental to the development of modern high strength low alloy steels.

The new Sheffield Assay Office

TheSheffield Assay Office, which opened in 1773, stamps precious metals with the city'scrown mark. TheCompany of Cutlers in Hallamshire was created in 1624 to regulate the manufacture ofedged tools. The head of this company (theMaster Cutler) is held in regard equal to the city'slord mayor and it has powers over the trademarking of steel with the Sheffield area.

While iron and steel have always been the main industries of Sheffield,coal mining has been a major feature of the outlying areas, and thePalace of Westminster inLondon was built usinglimestone and paving fromquarries in the nearby villages ofAnston andGreen Moor.

TheSheffield Industrial Museums Trust, a partnership between Sheffield City Council, Sheffield Hallam University and the Company of Cutlers in Hallamshire has preserved key sites associated with the city's industrial heritage, some of which actually still operate ancient equipment for the public, such as theAbbeydale Industrial Hamlet and theKelham Island Museum. Northwest of the city liesWortley Top Forge, which was a heavy ironworks of international renown. It is a site of historical and industrial importance, contributing to Sheffield's reputation for manufacturing high-quality, precision steel goods, though actually it is located within the boundaries of neighbouringBarnsley.

Economy

[edit]
See also:List of companies in Sheffield

This is a chart of trend of regionalgross value added (GVA) of Sheffield at current basic pricespublishedArchived 16 February 2008 at theWayback Machine (pp. 240–253) byOffice for National Statistics with figures in millions of British Pounds Sterling.

YearRegional Gross Value Added4Agriculture1Industry2Services3
19954,97191,5793,383
20006,16281,6314,523
20037,28091,7785,494

^1 includes hunting and forestry

^2 includes energy and construction

^3 includes financial intermediation services indirectly measured

^4 Components may not sum to totals due to rounding

Labour Profile[5]
Total employee jobs239,941
Full-time156,40765.2%
Part-time83,53334.8%
Manufacturing33,56814.0%
Construction9,2393.9%
Services196,64682.0%
Distribution, hotels & restaurants57,92424.1%
Transport & communications11,5754.8%
Finance, IT, other business activities43,69418.2%
Public admin, education & health70,44229.4%
Other services13,0115.4%
Tourism-related18,1467.6%

The city spearheaded the knowledge advances which gave it preeminence in steel and cutlery production; today the transfer of technology from Sheffield's universities is claimed by some to be "guaranteeing" Sheffield's continuing industrial and commercial evolution, creating cutting-edge enterprises across the city.[citation needed]High technology businesses such as the US companyFluent, Inc., for example, have chosen Sheffield as the centre for their international operations and so hasJennic, specialists insemiconductor design for thehome automation, commercial building automation, and industrial process monitoring and control markets. TheUniversity of Sheffield supports the growth of technology transfer in theSheffield City Region through theKroto Innovation Centre andSheffield Bioincubator which housesmall and medium enterprises as well asstartup companies working in similar areas, or occasionally alongside, University of Sheffield researchers.

Riverside Exchange, a new business district in Sheffield City Centre. Visible are the offices of Irwin Mitchell (left) andUK Visas and Immigration (centre).

Insight Enterprises will invest £50 million in a new European headquarters in the city resulting in 1700 jobs over the 2005–2008 period, while Boeing, through its collaboration with the University of Sheffield will be at the centre of anAdvanced Manufacturing Park (AMP) on the edge of the city, home to a cluster of businesses in the advanced manufacturing sector. Other areas of employment includecall centres, theCity Council, universities andhospitals.

There are signs that the Sheffield economy is seeing a revival. The 2004Barclays Bank Financial Planning study[6] revealed that, in 2003, the Sheffield district ofHallam was the highest ranking area outside London for overall wealth, the proportion of people earning over £60,000 a year standing at almost 12%. A survey by Knight Frank[7] revealed thatSheffield was the fastest growing city outsideLondon for office and residential space and rents during the second half of 2004.

Cushman & Wakefield's respected Global Research Reports include the "UK Cities Monitor 2008"[2] which placed Sheffield among the top ten "best cities to locate a business today", and reported 3rd and 4th places respectively for best office location and best new call centre location. The same report places Sheffield in 3rd place regarding "greenest reputation" and 2nd in terms of the availability of financial incentives.

As an example of the city's move away from traditional industry, Sheffield is now the home to one of the country's fastest growing online job boards,My Job Group, whose HQ is based there and serves the city with its very own jobs board. This site competes strongly with the traditional way of finding employment in Sheffield which is through the local newspaper whose main vacancies day is Thursday. Technology is also one of the fastest growing industries in Sheffield being home toCapita,Plusnet and Littlefish.

Organised by the Sheffield Chamber of Commerce and Industry, theSheffield Business Awards is an awards ceremony held on an annual basis to help highlight and promote business and industry in Sheffield and boost the economy of the city.

In 2012,Sheffield City Region Enterprise Zone was launched to promote development in a number of sites in Sheffield and across the wider region. In March 2014 additional sites were added to the zone.[8]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abc"Regional economic activity by gross domestic product, UK: 1998 to 2023".Office for National Statistics. Retrieved20 April 2025.
  2. ^ab"Cushman & Wakefield | Commercial Real Estate Brokers & Services".
  3. ^Government News Network (Accessed 23 October 2005)Archived 17 January 2005 at theWayback Machine
  4. ^Make It in SheffieldArchived 8 January 2006 at theWayback Machine Economy worth (Accessed 26 October 2005)
  5. ^[1]Archived 17 July 2011 at theWayback Machine (Accessed 7 January 2010)
  6. ^"Wealth hotspots 'outside London'".BBC News. (Accessed 7 July 2004)
  7. ^Sheffield 'hotbed' for investmentBBC News (Accessed 17 October 2005)
  8. ^Newton-Syms, Ellie (11 March 2014)."Sheffield City Region Enterprise Zone announces expansion plans". The Business Desk. Retrieved12 March 2015.

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