Engineering can't afford to die in Britain, or Britain will die with it. As James Dyson said when he gave the Dimbleby lecture in 2004:silverclaws":3md9oqvu said:...but I have turned my back on engineering as engineering is dying in Britain.
The whole lecture's worth reading....James Dyson":3md9oqvu said:Today, a Chinese company bought IBM Personal Computers lock, stock and barrel. Manufacturing, management and the brand.
Chinese corporations have bought Thomson and RCA televisions, Dirt Devil and Vax vacuum cleaners, Alcatel cellphones, and Dornier aircraft.
To survive against them, we can't just rely on shallow styling. We need technology and design that they don't have.
As long as we continue to innovate and produce products that have better features and work better, we can compete.
Our only chance for survival is better engineering.
Now I'm frequently told that championing manufacturing is yesterday's game. That we live in a post-industrial society. That the service and creative industries have replaced manufacturing.
Well consider this:
Of the world's ten largest corporations by revenue, nine make big, heavy things. Like cars or ships' turbines or computer hardware or consumer electronics.
These companies rely on their engineering and their technology – not their styling – for their wealth. Only one – WalMart – is a service company.
Look at the most profitable companies and again the facts speak for themselves. In the top ten, only three are service companies.
And as for the world's least profitable company? Why it's Vodafone, a service company that made a loss of more than 15 billion dollars last year.
So why does Britain need a manufacturing industry in this supposed age of the service economy?
My answer is simple. We have no choice. Only one in seven
British jobs is in manufacturing, yet they generate nearly two-thirds of exports.
Manufacturing creates the wealth and spending power that feed the service industry.
It's obvious. The rest of the world relies on manufacturing for its wealth.
Why do we think we can be different? If we want to maintain our position alongside other leading nations, we've got to join the rest.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/pressoffice/pressr ... yson.shtml