Hertfordshire Futures is developing a new Economic Strategy for the county for the next 10 years and beyond. This will build on the past legacy of success and plan ahead for another decade of growth. The strategy is the next stage in a journey which places residents and businesses at the heart of plans to build a resilient and productive economy which is also more inclusive and sustainable.
Economic Blueprint
Hertfordshire’s LEP’s Strategic Economic Plan (SEP), first published in 2014, set the economic blueprint for the past 10 years. Its vision to become one of the leading UK economies by 2030 was underpinned by these key priorities:
Hertfordshire’s Local Industrial Strategy focused on major sectors as a route to higher productivity growth.
Private and Public Investment
This strategic direction has helped to secure significant private and public sector investment in Hertfordshire and some key LEP funded Projects.
Since then, huge global pressures have impacted the local economy with COVID, UK’s departure from the European Union, war in Ukraine and the Middle East, and a cost-of-living crisis.
The time is right to revisit core economic aims and plan ahead for future growth in a changing world.
£46bn GVA per year (2023)
1.2 m people (2021)
760,556 (62.6%) aged 16-64 (2023)
61,065 (2024)
5 UK wealth generating sectors
£32,138, Median Annual Pay (2022)
Hertfordshire is powering innovation and pioneering new ideas across a diverse range of industries that have a global impact on our daily lives, offering real investment and cross-collaboration opportunities. Its five key sectors - advanced manufacturing; life sciences; creative (film & TV); digital and clean growth/sustainable development - are driving the UK economy and its growth priorities for the future. Professional services, such as marketing, advertising, legal, accounting and payroll, logistics and construction also make a sizeable contribution to the local economy.
Hertfordshire’s high-class economy is shaped around its key sectors and knowledge clusters, but it also has real challenges too with social inequalities; skills shortages; poor east-west transport links; lack of employment space and very low rates of housing affordability compared to the rest of the UK.
The Future
Looking ahead 10 years, Hertfordshire in the mid-2030s will look very different from now – most of the jobs in this near future have not even been invented yet.
Global Trends
While the economic strategy focus will be on growth and productivity, it will also need to take into account geopolitical uncertainty and much wider global trends such as:
New Government's Priorities
The strategy will also take into account the new Government’s priorities. These range from addressing the housing crisis and introducing planning reforms, to advancing both deeper and wider devolution. Addressing wider barriers to employment, supporting clusters and place/area-based economic assets, committing to a new Industrial Strategy, and achieving green growth are also on the agenda.
An ageing population
AI/digital
Climate change
New Priorities
Hertfordshire Futures (formerly Hertfordshire LEP) is a dynamic private-public sector partnership focused on driving sustainable economic growth with a strong track record in delivering high value projects. It adopted the new name Hertfordshire Futures following its integration into Hertfordshire County Council. The renamed organisation was formerly launched at this event in July 2024 kickstarting the engagement for the economic strategy.
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