BPF Meets Bank of England
Monday, 28 July 2014
In the wide ranging discussion the BPF reported the main features of its recently published Business Conditions Survey and provided detailed commentary from the key sectors constituting the industry. The Bank will use the information provided by the BPF in in its assessment and projections of the UK economy.
BPF representatives relayed the outstanding performance of the UK's automotive industry, which is expected to continue to grow over the next ten years and has some plants sporting productivity levels difficult to match anywhere in the world. They also reported on a real revival in the construction industry, albeit a cyclical sector with limited access to technical skills. Packaging had enjoyed mixed fortunes with overall growth last year evolving into a mixed picture in 2014 with consumer retail packaging flat but with significant growth in packaging for the DIY market. The healthcare sector was growing and parts of the general moulding industry were 'bursting at the seams'.
Federation representatives however, voiced their concerns at the behaviour of insurers who often took a generic approach without recognising the merits of individual cases. Exporters reported that they were now beginning to encounter some resistance in certain markets owing to the appreciation of sterling.
But they cited the availability of skilled staff as the major restraining factor on the industry's future development. Engineers were only to be found at a very high price, whilst given the shortage of people with suitable qualifications, an initiative needs to be undertaken to encourage bright young people employed in low wage sectors to enter the plastics industry to be trained up. The Business Conditions Survey has also pointed to a growing skills gap.
BPF Director General, Philip Law, said ' The BPF is grateful to the Bank of England for the annual invitation to a dialogue. The Bank particularly values the fact that the breadth of the plastics industry can provide a bellwether to the health of the manufacturing economy as a whole '.
ENDS
For all media enquiries, BPF logos and images please contact Laura Hindley, Communications and Industrial Issues Executive on [email protected] or 0207 457 5043
Notes for editors:
The British Plastics federation (BPF) is the UK trade association for the plastics industry - representing the whole supply chain including polymer producers, distributors, additives suppliers, machinery manufacturers, processors and recyclers.
For further information on the BPF Business Conditions Survey, please click here







