New independent report highlights importance of high-tech UK intellectual property in recovery of British economy

16 November 2020

The publication of an economic impact report by the independent analysis group Oxford Economics highlights the important role that British-generated intellectual property (IP) will play in the nation’s economic recovery.

  • New independent report shows that employees at defence firm Leonardo are 80% more productive than the national average because the company generates high-tech IP in Britain and exports it globally
  • Chair & MD Norman Bone: “Creating IP in this country keeps people employed in high-value jobs by generating exports, which is incredibly important as we kick-start the economy.”

The publication of an economic impact report by the independent analysis group Oxford Economics highlights the important role that British-generated intellectual property (IP) will play in the nation’s economic recovery.

The report also shows that Leonardo employees are 80% more productive than the UK average, largely as a result of the IP generated by the company’s highly-skilled engineers in the UK, which can then be traded globally.

Leonardo employs 7,500 people across the UK including more than 2,000 in Scotland. 

Leonardo produces the UK’s AW159 Wildcat and AW101 Merlin helicopters and is at the heart of some of the country’s most advanced defence electronics developments. These include the world-beating new ECRS Mk2 radar for RAF Typhoon aircraft and being one of the founding UK members of the Tempest programme, which is developing the successor to Typhoon, which will go into service in 2035. 

The company is also working with the Ministry of Defence to understand Britain’s aspirations for next-generation military helicopter technologies, including drones, and is proposing a UK-built AW149 troop-transport helicopter to replace the RAF’s Puma fleet when the latter goes out of service. Producing the UK’s next military helicopter on-shore is seen as a way of preserving high-value design and manufacturing jobs and boosting the economy, with every £1 invested in Leonardo putting £2.40 back into the local economy.

“Creating IP in this country keeps people employed in high-value jobs by generating exports, which is incredibly important as we kick-start the economy,” said Norman Bone, Chair and Managing Director of Leonardo in the UK. “Ours are some of the country’s most stable jobs; we elected not to furlough anyone during the Covid-19 crisis, which has had a knock-on benefit for our local economies. The important thing is that the UK government continues, alongside us, to invest in Britain’s high-tech engineering sector as we work towards economic recovery.”