Data infrastructure and innovation alone are not enough to level up

Data infrastructure and innovation alone are not enough to level up

On the 2nd February, the Government published ‘The levelling up’ White paper which places data and innovation at the heart of it. Six months on and whilst we have seen huge change in politics, moving forward the aspirations of the paper must hold true as does the role of smart places in achieving them. The paper is 305 pages long and covers a lot of ground literally and metaphorically.

To quote the paper “Levelling up will require us to:

  1. boost productivity, pay, jobs and living standards by growing the private sector, especially in those places where they are lagging
  2. spread opportunities and improve public services, especially in those places where they are weakest
  3. restore a sense of community, local pride and belonging, especially in those places where they have been lost; and
  4. empower local leaders and communities, especially in those places lacking local agency.”

Key to achieving all of these is the property sector and the wider built environment. Property is one of the largest employers in the UK and sufficient housing and infrastructure are essential to the future ‘levelling up’. ?Property income also drives both the local and national economy and often in partnership with local authorities and the property sector is at the heart of creating vibrant and successful public spaces.

It is hard to imagine achieving any of the levelling up aspirations set out in the paper without the property sector playing a major role. It is therefore a little surprising that it isn’t mentioned more often. ‘Offices’ don’t get a mention, nor does ‘real estate’ and ‘property’ is only mentioned a total of six times. Unsurprisingly, ‘Housing’ is the focus of the paper in relation to the property sector with a total of 154 mentions.

Counting the number of times a word is mentioned is hardly a definitive reflection of the content, but it does provide an indication of the focus.

To quote the Prime Minister in his foreword “We’ll…harness the incredible power of data not just at a national and regional level but all the way down to neighbourhoods.” Perhaps unsurprisingly then, data is mentioned 166 times and innovation 170.

In 2019, I was commissioned by the British Property Federation to write a report about the state of digital transformation in the UK property sector and what needs to happen next. One of the key findings of the report was that on a world stage the UK has world beating national data infrastructure and innovation. They are some of the key strengths that the UK has for attracting talent and investment and now against the backdrop of the levelling up paper they are going to become even more important.

However, the paper also identified that having these strengths alone is not enough, they need to be used effectively. Whether to inform planning policy, improve the transaction process or increase office productivity, the effective use of data by both Government and the property sector is essential.

A lot of progress has been made in the years since the report was published. On the Government side there are several initiatives around the better use of data in property, for example DLUHC and the Geospatial Commission are leading many great projects around this. The sector led Real Estate Data Foundation is also starting to join the dots between the great work being carried out by individual and more established industry organisations. Smart buildings and smart cities have evolved from theory to practice,

But there is a long way to go and much more engagement with data and innovation is needed by both the public and private sector - both individually and together.

Away from the political angles, levelling up as an aspiration has to be the right way to go for the UK. To achieve this, the Government and the property sector must better leverage the data that we have available and continue to innovate.

Previous Prime Ministers, Secretaries of State and the Housing Ministers all encouraged the better use of data. Let’s hope their successors continue to drive this message about data for the sake of levelling up.

This comment first appeared in September 2022 in EG.

Ben Hawes

Technology policy consultant, researcher and writer.

2 年

Great article Dan. Your points might usefully be directed to the current consultation on geospatial opportunities across the economy. https://www.gov.uk/government/consultations/call-for-evidence-geospatial-opportunities-across-the-economy

James Wilson

Product & Delivery Lead @ Huler.io | Your work. Your way.

2 年

Great article Dan

Laura Gibson

Strategy & Comms Consultant I Director and co-Founder of Calvermont - a South East based brand & communications agency that focusses on property, destination and charity

2 年

Nice work Dan Hughes Hope you're keeping well x

Jo Tasker FRSA

Strategic Consultant | #BuiltEnvironment #Technology #Education #Skills #Employability #Social Value #PropTech #EdTech #Strategy #NextGenerations

2 年

They have definitely started to pick up the conversation Dan, I spoke at https://www.publicsectorconnect.org/publicsectorproptech22/ on Weds. Where Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities brought the PropTech industry together with the public sector for an educational & informative event. 3 out of 6 talks were specifically on data & unlocking its potential... Thumbs up emoji! :)

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