- Exports Minister has
addressed tech businesses in Northern Ireland,
outlining a series of measures to help recovery from
the challenges of coronavirus
- The new measures will help create and support jobs by
increasing exports and attracting international
investment
- Northern Ireland’s £1bn tech sector is vital to the
nation’s economy, employing 28,000 people across 1,200
companies
Northern Ireland’s flourishing tech sector stands to be one
of the biggest beneficiaries of “Bounce-Back” plans to help
firms recover from the challenges of the coronavirus
crisis.
Speaking to business owners from the country at a virtual
event today, the UK Minister for Exports, , and
Minister of State for Northern Ireland, , outlined
a series of measures aimed at turning the UK into a global
digital powerhouse.
Around 28,000 people are employed in Northern Ireland’s
tech sector, which is worth approximately £1bn, across
1,200 companies, with Belfast becoming Europe’s leading
destination city for new software development projects.
The new measures jointly announced by the Department for
International Trade (DIT) and Department for Digital,
Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) last month, will seek to
increase tech exports to fast-growing international
markets, including Asia-Pacific, strengthen scale-ups’
readiness to export, and attract investment to drive
innovation and create jobs.
The comprehensive package includes the creation of a new
Digital Trade Network for Asia-Pacific, which will support
small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) to break into the
Asian market.
The plans also include the launch of a new Tech Exporting
Academy, which will provide expert advice to UK scale-ups
on subject areas essential to expansion, including
regulation, intellectual property, and compliance. The
Academy will be led and delivered in partnership with
leading professional services firms.
Northern Ireland is fast becoming a global cyber security
hub, delivering expertise on threats to national security,
critical infrastructure, capital markets, e-commerce and
child safety online. The Centre for Secure Information
Technology (CSIT), based at Queen’s University Belfast, is
the UK’s largest cyber security research centre.
In addition, its creative and digital media sector has a
wide range of talent and state-of-the-art technology,
hosting a dynamic cluster of companies who are working with
global clients within animation, audio technology, mobile
content and e-learning.
Exports Minister, , said:
As a global hub of digital excellence, the UK is
perfectly placed to grasp the huge opportunities ahead
for tech growth - and nowhere more so than Northern
Ireland, home to one of the most vibrant tech ecosystems
in the country.
This country’s tech sector is a huge success story,
driving innovation, boosting growth and generating
well-paid jobs. I am fully confident that, with the
measures we have set out, a tech-centred recovery will
allow the UK, and particularly Northern Ireland, to
overcome the challenges of coronavirus and reinforce our
status as a leading player in digital trade.
Minister of State for Norther Ireland, , said:
I’m very excited about the opportunities the Bounce Back
Plan presents for Northern Ireland, which already has
very strong foundations in the industry. Northern Ireland
is set to benefit hugely from this new scheme as it has
an established £1 billion tech sector which is vital to
the local economy. These new measures will help these
tech businesses prosper in the post-coronavirus economy,
not only here in the UK, but internationally.
Northern Ireland Minister for the Economy, Diane Dodds,
said:
I welcome these bounce-back measures from the UK
Government, which will assist Northern Ireland’s tech
sector push forward the economic recovery. The tech
sector is a cornerstone of the NI economy. I am keen to
build on the success that companies in the sector have
had, and continue to have, propelled by our world class
skills and innovation ecosystem.
Central to this aim is the ability to access key markets
such as Asia Pacific, as well as marketing of the
world-class tech services that NI companies can deliver.
These measures will provide valuable advice and support
for our tech firms as they look to compete globally in
the current economic climate.
The government’s measures are being announced as part of a
wider programme of support for the UK tech sector to ensure
the industry benefits from trade opportunities, including
future free trade agreements (FTAs).
Future FTAs with partners like the US and Japan will enable
the UK to go further, setting new standards in areas of
digital technology and e-commerce, and encouraging further
investment into the UK’s world-leading tech companies.
The full range of measures announced by the Government
includes:
- Launch of an £8m Digital Trade Network (DTN) for Asia
Pacific, a joint DIT-DCMS network, to support UK tech
businesses to internationalise in this fast-growing
region, attract capital and talent to the UK and enhance
UK digital economy collaborations internationally. By
increasing UK digital tech expertise on the ground across
a number of key markets - including Japan, South Korea,
Thailand, Singapore, Indonesia, and Australia, government
will help innovative companies access new trade and
investment opportunities, and forge new international
partnerships for the digital economy. Tech Nation – the
UK tech scale up experts – will be joining the Digital
Trade Network, which will see businesses participate in
an international mission to Asia Pacific, as part of Tech
Nation’s programmes in fintech, AI and cyber, to support
their expansion into the region.
- Creation of a new Tech Exporting Academy, to provide
expert advice for high-potential SMEs to support growth
into priority markets. Led by leading professional
services firms (including Linklaters, Deloitte, KPMG,
BDO, Taylor Wessing, EY and Clifford Chance) UK SMEs will
receive expert advice across a wide range of areas
including legal, tax, intellectual property, regulatory
and compliance to help reduce the time to market for
exporting and increase UK exports. The support will
ensure that women tech founders are represented on the
cohorts of companies selected for the export academy.
- A new DIT platform to supercharge UK tech engagement
on the global stage and mitigate the impact on firms
unable to attend international industry events and
investor meetings. This will include a greater presence
at international industry events and access to virtual
trade shows and virtual event platforms to support
international buyer-seller meetings and
companies-to-investors introductions. This will be
launched in September. Virtual trade shows will allow UK
businesses to showcase their capabilities and network
with overseas businesses and investors. Technology will
be at the heart of the government’s new Ready To Trade
campaign with specific campaigns on edtech, medtech,
cyber, VR, gaming and animation.
- An expansion in support for DIT’s High Potential
Opportunities (HPOs) tech programme, to drive foreign
direct investment (FDI) into emerging subsectors
including 5G, Industry 4.0, Photonics and Immersive
Technology, ensuring the UK remains the most attractive
destination for tech investment in Europe
post-coronavirus. Working closely with the Devolved
Administrations, LEPs and industry partners, government
will seek to promote the full spectrum of UK tech
capability to overseas investors and identify emerging
growth markets for UK firms.
- The launch of a new financial technology (fintech)
campaign in the UK, including promoting UK fintech
companies who enable digitisation and resilience in
priority export markets, to enhance UK tech
competitiveness on the global stage after Coronavirus and
ensure we remain the best place to start, scale and
internationalise a fintech business.
- An uplift in outreach and engagement by UK Export
Finance’s (UKEF) marketing and communications to raise
awareness of UKEF’s offer among UK tech firms and how
UKEF and Trade Finance can help them win and fulfil
export contracts.
Tech is a key growth area for the UK, contributing £149bn
to the economy in 2018, (7.7% UK GVA) and employing more
than 2.9 million people. Last year, the UK attracted a
record £10.1bn worth of investment (up 44% from the
previous year), more than Germany and France combined.