The number of people employed in producing arms
for export is far fewer than popularly supposed. Also
contrary to popular perception, most arms export
jobs are located in areas with very low
unemployment and hence tight labour markets. There
are clearly some locations where there is potential for
hardship from a ban on arms exports, however
company and public initiatives have been shown to
greatly improve the re-employment success of those
made redundant. While additional funding would be
needed to support these one-off initiatives, this would
amount to far less than the ongoing cost of
subsidising arms exports.
Individual jobs are important but neither the
number nor location of relevant jobs justifies the
hijacking of the debate over arms exports.
Employment arguments are tangential to the
government's concerns but, as the only basis on
which the general public will support arms exports,
the government continues to use them as a
justification. There cannot be honest debate about
arms exports until the government judges export
applications against its own established criteria and
is open about its motivations.
The 'key findings' below and the following
six sections are a summary of a study by Ian
Goudie of Defence and Aerospace Analysts,
carried out on behalf of the Campaign Against
Arms Trade (CAAT). Whilst a number of reports have addressed the
economic costs and benefits of the export of
UK military equipment, this study considers
employment. It seeks to address the maximum
job loss scenario given an immediate ban on all
UK arms exports. A ban is assumed to result
from a political decision. The central element of
the study is an analysis of the the dependence
on military exports of various regions
throughout the UK.
Key findings
Employment dependent on the export of military equipment accounts for only 0.3% of total UK
employment. This is comprised of 45,000 jobs directly dependent on military exports and 45,000
indirectly dependent. The total of 90,000 is much less than the 240,000 people who leave the
unemployment register each month
Aerospace equipment accounts for over 80 per cent of total UK military exports. One company, BAE Systems, accounts for two thirds (30,000) of all UK employees directly dependent on military exports.
Arms export jobs are concentrated in the South East, South West and North West of England. The South East and the South West have almost full employment with claimant rates of 1.5 per cent and 2.0 per cent respectively. Overall unemployment in the UK is at its lowest level for 25 years
A few individual localities, in particular Yeovil in Somerset and Brough in Humberside, are particularly dependent on military exports. The effects of a ban are likely to be sharper in these locations.
Unemployment for redundant military workers is short for many (typically less than a few months) but long for few. Many of those who are unemployed for a long time accept lower skilled work with lower pay.
The way in which a company handles redundancy makes a significant difference to the well-being of those made redundant.
Public policies can play a major role in helping redundant workers find new employment.
National, regional and local initiatives aimed at assisting redundant workers to find new employment have been successful, in some cases achieving over 90 per cent re-employment within a year.
Specific assistance programmes may require additional funding but this one-off cost would be much less than the estimated annual cost of subsidising military exports.
Employment
In mid-2001 the UK employment rate was 74.5 per cent
among people of working age. This represents 28.15 million
people, up 159,000 on the same period a year earlier.
Manufacturing jobs, which would include military export jobs,
stood at 3.8 million - down by 123,000 compared with a year
earlier.
The principal official measure of unemployment, and the
one utilised in this report, is the monthly 'claimant count'.
This measures the number of people out of work and in
receipt of unemployment-related benefits, Job Seekers
Allowance (JSA) and National Insurance Credits. These
figures are published by region, by Travel To Work Areas, by
counties and local authority areas and by parliamentary
constituencies. The majority of those joining the claimant
count leave it very quickly - 50 per cent leave the claimant
count within three months of joining and over 80 per cent
within twelve months.
UK military export dependency
UK employment dependent on military spending and exports
has more than halved since 1980 when some 740,000 jobs
were reported as being dependent on such spending. The
Ministry of Defence now estimates that some 345,000 jobs
are dependent on military expenditure and equipment exports.
However only 26 per cent (90,000) of these are reported as
being dependent on the export of military equipment, see
Table 1. Half of this 90,000 are directly dependent on the
exports; the other half are indirectly dependent, i.e. sub-contractors
to the prime contractors. As sub-contractors, these
jobs are often less dependent on sales to any particular
customer.
Table 1: UK employment dependent on
military expenditure & exports (thousands)
Year: 19--
80/81
90/91
98/99
Total employment
740
555
345
Direct
405
295
175
Indirect
335
260
170
Employment from MoD expenditure
600
405
255
Direct
330
220
130
Indirect
270
185
125
Split by:
Equipment expenditure
Direct
230
140
85
Indirect
190
130
85
Non Equipment expenditure
Direct
100
80
45
Indirect
80
60
40
Employment from military exports
140
150
90
Direct
75
75
45
Indirect
65
75
45
Source: DASA (Procurement); UK military export dependency
Although military industry is often said to represent a
major part of the UK manufacturing base, it should be noted
that direct military exports account for just over 1 per cent of
all UK manufacturing jobs.
BAE Systems
The Department of Trade and Industry reports that there are in
excess of 3,500 military and aerospace companies in the UK.
The largest of these, by far, is BAE Systems. BAE Systems is a
prime contractor and systems integrator in the air, land and
sea military market sectors. The company is Europe's largest
aerospace and military company with sales of £12.2bn, nearly
100,000 employees (including all Joint Venture employees)
and customers in more than 129 countries. 52,000 BAE
Systems staff in the UK are dependent on military work, with
30,000 of these being dependent on military exports.
BAE Systems regards itself as a global business. Indeed
with the government's recent change in policy to allow foreign
investors to own more than 50 per cent of the company, the
majority shareholding in BAE Systems is now non-UK.
Industrial Sectors
Aerospace - In 2000, aerospace related equipment
accounted for over 96 per cent of military equipment exports.
Although the amount and proportion will vary on an annual
basis, typically more than 80 per cent of military exports come
from the aerospace sector. The UK aerospace industry is
involved in the design, development, production, repair and
maintenance of military and civil aircraft, helicopters, aero-engines
and equipment as well as missiles and space
systems.
Shipbuilding - The other easily identifiable military sector is
that of shipbuilding. Although the UK has a strong maritime
tradition and ranked fifth in the list of countries exporting
naval ships in the 1980s, with some 12 per cent of total naval
transfers, the future looks to be almost exclusively within the
domestic market.
Regional and local military employment
The importance of military exports varies greatly from region
to region. As a percentage of manufacturing employment it
ranges from 0.002% in the East of England to 6.2% in the
South West, see Table 2. Total figures for jobs at risk from a
ban on military exports are given in Table 3, along with the
present claimant count rate and the maximum rate following a
ban. The three most export dependent regions are considered
below, along with the two towns likely to be most affected.
Table 2: UK employment dependent on
military expenditure & exports (thousands)
United Kingdom
2.1
North East
0.14
North West
3.0
Yorkshire & Humberside
0.06
East Midlands
0.1
West Midlands
1.1
East of England
0.002
South East
4.8
South West
6.2
Wales
0.2
Scotland
1.1
Northern Ireland
1.7
Source: based on Institute for Employment Research [2001] and House of Commons Library
The South West
The South West has a working population of 2.4 million and
claimant count rate of 2.0 per cent. Over half of Ministry of
Defence military industrial jobs (i.e. those involved in
domestic procurement) have been lost since 1987, falling
from 27,000 to 14,000. Much of this loss has been at Bristol's
BAE Systems and Rolls Royce sites.
It is estimated that 20,610 jobs are dependent on military
exports in the South West. If all these employees were to lose
their jobs and become claimants there would be a
total of 69,410 claimants in the region, around the
same number as in 1999 (75,300) or, at 2.8 per cent,
approximately the UK average. However if the post-redundancy
experience of a 1996 study were to be
repeated, then 5,008 would remain unemployed. In
that situation the number of claimants would
increase to 53,808, or 2.2 per cent.
Yeovil - AgustaWestland, Yeovil, is the UK's only
helicopter manufacturer and will employ around
4,300 people once redundancies already
announced are completed. Whilst it is difficult to
speculate on how many of these jobs are dependent
on the export of military helicopters, we do know
that the town is heavily dependent on military
contracts and in 1992 had more than twice the
European average of military dependency. There are
presently 669 claimants in Yeovil so any significant
job loss at AgustaWestland would have a major
impact on the claimant count rate (presently 1.5 per
cent for the Yeovil Travel To Work Area).
However unemployment in the town is low and
job opportunities in manufacturing do exist. It should also be
stressed that given the MoD's reliance on AgustaWestland, for
present and future helicopters, and the company's success in
both the military and civil sectors, the future of the site is not
likely to be at risk from a ban on exports of military
equipment.
The South East
The region with the largest number of military export related
jobs is the South East, with some 38,340. It is a large
diversified economy which has been able to absorb
significant military job losses over the past decade. If all
38,340 jobs were lost and all workers 'signed on', the
claimant rate would rise from 1.5 per cent to 2.4 per cent -high
for the region but still below the national average.
However not all of those made redundant would become
claimants. A resettlement rate of 75 to 80 per cent was
achieved in 1999 and the labour market has become even
tighter since then.
If all military export employees were made redundant,
most of the local economies in the region would absorb the
workforce with little or no government intervention.
The North West
The region, and in particular Preston/Lancashire, has
experienced significant military job losses over the years. For
example, BAE Systems (then BAe) closed its Strand Road,
Preston site in 1990 with the loss of 2,524 jobs and shed 900
jobs at its Warton site and 4,000 at its Samlesbury site in
1999.
At the regional level, the North West has a total of 115,600
claimants, a rate of 3.5 per cent. A mass redundancy of the
16,020 military export jobs could result in a maximum
unemployment rate of 4.0 per cent. However there are 46,700
unfilled vacancies in the North West and a major programme
of re-employment and re-training would result in a number of
these vacancies being filled.
Brough - BAE Systems' site at Brough, home of the Hawk
trainer/fighter, is East Yorkshire's biggest employer. Brough is
located within the Hull Travel To Work Area, which has 8,259
claimants, a rate of 7.1 per cent. A mass 3,000 redundancies
would have a major impact on the local labour market. The
worse case scenario would be an increase to 11,259
claimants, a rate of 9.8 per cent, which would be the second
highest Travel To Work Area claimant count in England.
Impact of military job losses
The experience of those made redundant can be summarised
as follows:
many cease to be unemployed within a relatively short period, accepting a new job, entering training or education, retiring or voluntarily leaving the workforce, typically within one year.
those who remain unemployed are likely to do so for a long time: unskilled and older workers have more difficulty finding work; most redundant workers do not move in search of work; the majority of workers accept lower skilled work and lower pay when starting a new job.
Table 3: Potential impact on jobs and unemployment of a ban on arms exports
Rate %
Max Jobs at Risk
Max New Rate %
United Kingdom
3.0
91,260
3.3
North East
5.1
800
5.2
North West
3.5
16,020
4.0
Yorkshire & Humberside
3.7
3,000
3.8
East Midlands
2.9
450
2.9
West Midlands
3.5
6,030
3.7
East
2.0
2,160
2.1
London
155,700
3.3
Included in South East
South East
1.5
38,340
2.9
South West
2.0
20,610
2.8
Wales
3.6
450
3.6
Scotland
4.0
3,600
4.1
Northern Ireland
4.8
1,890
5.0
Company Redundancy Programmes
Redundancies have taken place in military industry over the
past twenty years as a result of military cuts, cost reductions,
productivity improvement and corporate restructuring. During
this period companies have employed a variety of redundancy
strategies ranging from limited consultation and support to
full consultation and assistance, often including the use of
external consultants and outplacement agencies. BAE
Systems, Thales and Rolls Royce have all provided corporate
assistance for those made redundant. This has had a
significant beneficial impact on the attitude to re-employment
and re-training of those losing their jobs.
The Role of Policy Initiatives
A great deal of help and assistance is available for redundant
military workers and this can have a positive impact on the
propensity to take up training, secure employment or become
self-employed.
Task Forces
Government interventions following announcements of
BAe/BAE Systems job losses at Prestwick and on the Clyde
took the form of task forces. The Prestwick Task Force
consisted of politicians, business leaders and trade unionists,
and succeeded in meeting all of the employment targets set.
The Clyde Task Force was composed of an even wider range
of bodies and considered the strategic issues facing the Clyde
shipbuilding industry. It managed to reduce the number of
compulsory redundancies and recommended a short-term
training and employment subsidy programme to encourage
employers to recruit and re-train redundant shipyard workers
six months after redundancy.
The Rapid Response Service
The government has established the Rapid Response Service
to provide a coherent response to significant redundancies. It
is run by a network of Employment Service senior regional
managers and is delivered through local partnerships of
various organisations including: Regional Development
Agencies; Local Learning Skills Councils; Government
Offices; the Welsh Assembly and Scottish Executive. The
partnership works with the company undergoing a
redundancy programme to ensure an appropriate response to
the situation. This includes:
Offering consultancy to the company
Analysing the effect on the local economy and co-ordinating activities to overcome barriers to re-employment
Offering information and advice to those affected and developing customised training programmes, where appropriate.
Defence Diversification Agency (DDA)
The DDA was established in January 1999 in response to local
authorities and trade unions calling for government action to
offset the negative consequences of reductions in military
expenditure. A Defence Diversification Council (DDC) was
promised to ensure close co-ordination of DDA activities with
those of other departments and agencies with responsibilities
for industrial sponsorship and regional regeneration, but this
has yet to be set up.
A government decision to ban the export of arms could be
accompanied by the establishment of the DDC in order to
assist companies and local communities in managing the
potential impact on jobs and businesses resulting from such
a ban.
Conclusions
Company closures and job losses have become an
unfortunate fact of life within many key industry sectors as
global markets become even more competitive. As a result of
substantial job losses in military industry since 1990, it is no
longer a major employer in many of its traditional localities.
Only 45,000 jobs are directly dependent on arms exports,
with a further 45,000 indirectly dependent. Employment
dependent on military exports represents only 0.3 per cent of
all employment. Unemployment is at its lowest level in 25
years and many localities with plants exporting military
equipment are now experiencing tight labour markets.
Although workers are likely to experience short-term
unemployment on losing their jobs, many are likely to find a
new job albeit at a lower wage, whilst others will leave the
workforce to study, retire or look after family. Only a few are
likely to remain unemployed for any length of time. Initiatives
to manage redundancies have been successful in achieving
90 per cent plus resettlement, though this still leaves around
10 per cent of redundant workers facing severe hardship. This
may well be higher in those communities, such as Yeovil and
Brough, which are likely to be the most severely affected by
an arms export ban.
The task would be to ensure that military companies work
in partnership with other organisations to provide the most
effective, sensitive and co-ordinated approach to helping
people who may lose their jobs. To date all the various
stakeholders, including the major military companies, have
responded positively to this challenge.
The most co-ordinated scenario would be for the
government to establish a UK Task Force to address the
impact on jobs and communities as a result of a ban on the
export of arms. A number of such task forces have been
established to manage previous military and aerospace
redundancies. The aim of these was not to convince military
and aerospace companies to change their position but to
assist workers and their communities to diversify. With a
government policy of banning the export of arms, the political
'will' would be there to assist those workers and communities
affected.
Specific programmes may need to be considered for those
workers who do not find re-employment swiftly. This could
include the short-term training and employment subsidy
programme proposed by the Clyde Shipyard Task Force.
Whilst such programmes would require additional funding,
the one-off £3,350 maximum cost of a £2,600 wage subsidy
and a £750 training allowance is much less than the £8,500
estimated annual cost of subsidising each military export job
and could be considered as an investment worth making.
September 2002
Campaign Against Arms Trade, 11 Goodwin St, Finsbury Park, London N4 3HQ
Tel: +44-(0)20 7281 0297 | Fax: +44-(0)20 7281 4369