Knowledge Organiser: The Changing UK Economy
Part of The UK Economy and Regional Change · GCSE GCSE Geography revision
This topic summary covers Knowledge Organiser: The Changing UK Economy within The UK Economy and Regional Change for GCSE Geography. Revise The UK Economy and Regional Change in The Changing Economic World for GCSE Geography with 15 exam-style questions and 20 flashcards. This is a high-frequency topic, so it is worth revising until the explanation feels precise and repeatable. It is section 16 of 16 in this topic. Use this topic summary to connect the idea to the wider topic before moving on to questions and flashcards.
Topic position
Section 16 of 16
Practice
15 questions
Recall
20 flashcards
Knowledge Organiser: The Changing UK Economy
Key Terms
- Deindustrialisation: decline of manufacturing; UK went from ~8m manufacturing jobs (1970) to ~2.5m (2020)
- Post-industrial economy: services (80% GDP) and knowledge industries replace manufacturing
- North-South divide: persistent regional inequality — London £57k GVA per head vs Northeast £23k
- Regeneration: investment to transform declining post-industrial areas
- Gentrification: rising prices displace original lower-income residents from regenerated areas
- Levelling Up: government policy to reduce regional inequality — limited impact so far
- TNC: transnational corporation operating in multiple countries (Nissan, BBC, Amazon)
Salford Quays Key Facts
- Manchester docks opened 1894; closed 1982 (containerisation)
- Regeneration began 1985
- Lowry arts centre opened 2000
- MediaCityUK opened 2011 — BBC, ITV relocated from London
- 250+ businesses; 7,000+ jobs; £1.5bn+ private investment
- University of Salford campus on site
- Limitation: skills mismatch; gentrification; adjacent deprivation persists
North-South Divide Data
- London GVA per head: ~£57,000
- Northeast England GVA per head: ~£23,000
- Life expectancy gap: 8+ years (Blackpool vs Kensington)
- London receives ~60% of UK private investment (13% of population)
- Causes: historical industrial geography + London as financial hub + cumulative advantage
- Jarrow: 67% unemployment when shipyard closed
Regeneration Evaluation Framework
- Evidence it works: investment attracted, jobs created, image improved, transport links, cultural facilities
- Evidence of limits: skills mismatch, gentrification, adjacent deprivation, incomers get jobs not original residents
- Judgement: regeneration changes places more easily than it changes lives
- PRIDE: Post-industrial shift, Regional inequality, Industrial decline causes, Deindustrialisation effects, Evidence (Salford Quays)
Common Mistakes
- Saying deindustrialisation was simply "factories closing": Explain the causes — cheaper overseas labour, containerisation replacing dock workers, globalisation shifting manufacturing to NEEs — the process needs a causal chain
- Claiming regeneration fully solves deprivation: Salford Quays created 7,000+ jobs but adjacent areas remain highly deprived; skills mismatch means original residents often cannot access the new jobs — always evaluate limits
- Ignoring the north-south divide with data: "The north is poorer than the south" scores nothing — use specific figures: London GVA per head ~£57,000 vs Northeast ~£23,000; 8+ year life expectancy gap between Blackpool and Kensington
- Confusing primary, secondary and tertiary sectors: The UK's economic shift is from secondary (manufacturing) to tertiary (services) and quaternary (knowledge industries) — be precise about which sector is growing or declining
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Practice Questions for The UK Economy and Regional Change
Which economic sector makes up approximately 80% of the UK's economy today?
Describe the difference between the tertiary sector and the quaternary sector of the UK economy.
Quick Recall Flashcards
15 questions on The UK Economy and Regional Change — practise free
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