Speech

Secretary of State Nadine Dorries' speech at the Creative Coalition festival

Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries outlines strength of the UK's creative industries

This was published under the 2019 to 2022 Johnson Conservative government
The Rt Hon Nadine Dorries

Hello everyone, and welcome to this year’s Creative Coalition Festival.

It’s great to be part of this event - and I know you’ve got all sorts of interesting speakers to look forward to over the next three days:

People from the world of TV and music, fashion and street art, illustrators and cartoonists, composers and writers.

All of those individuals, scattered across the UK, come together to form a creative powerhouse that is now worth over £116 billion to our economy.

In fact, I was reading an article in the Sunday Times the other day that I think encapsulates where we are as a nation today.

The article argued that of all the things we’re good at in the UK - and there are many - we’re best at the arts.

And the author had plenty of evidence from the last few months alone to back that claim up:

Coldplay’s latest album went straight to No.1 in 14 countries.

Dua Lipa’s Levitating was the most streamed song in the US and Adele’s 30 the biggest-selling album of 2021 worldwide.

Brits from the world of TV, film and advertising regularly sweep the awards shows.

Emma Thompson and Bill Nighy are leading the charge for British productions premiering at this year’s Sundance.

And on social media, the most-mentioned British educational institute isn’t Oxford or Cambridge - but Hogwarts.

The point is, it’s our writers and musicians and designers and composers who are most celebrated around the world today - and who do the most to sell the UK abroad.

They wield an incredible amount of influence, and because of that, the reputation of Global Britain depends on them.

Which is why this government is determined to protect those industries and build on their success.

I say this, by the way, as someone who has spent hours of their own life pouring blood, sweat, and tears into their novels. So I know what a labour of love the creative process is.

It’s why we stepped in during the pandemic - at a time when every single industry was crying out for our help - and took the unprecedented decision to spend £2 billion of emergency rescue funds to protect our arts and culture and £500 million to keep the cameras rolling on productions across the country. As a result, our film and TV sector is booming, with studios booked out nationwide.

It’s why we put the creative industries at the heart of our recovery plan.

And it’s why we’re looking to strengthen those industries for the future - inside and out - so that they’re open to all so that they protect the people who work in them.

And so, ultimately, they can continue to grow and grow in the decades to come.

For example, I’ve been working closely with Rebecca Ferguson - who I know you’ll be hearing from at this festival and who has bravely spoken out about her own experiences of bullying and harassment in the music industry.

We’re also looking very carefully at the issue of music streaming, competition and fair payment, to make sure the modern music industry works for everyone.

And we’ve got lots of exciting projects coming up as a result of the recent Spending Review.

Today, I can announce we intend to provide close to £50m to support creative businesses across the UK. This includes £21m to deliver a multi-year UK Global Screen Fund, £8.4m for the UK Games Fund and £18.4m for an expansion of the Creative Scale-Up programme, to support the fastest growing creative businesses across the country.

This will form the foundation for an ambitious Creative Industries Sector Vision which we are hoping to publish in the summer.

The Sector Vision will have four key objectives:

To ensure the UK creative sector is globally competitive; inclusive; environmentally sustainable; and embedded within communities up and down the country.

And I’ll be bringing my own clear personal priorities into this vision.

I know, for example, that it has to focus on improving accessibility.

We have to do better at making sure that people from deprived backgrounds instinctively feel that the creative industries are for them, too.

That they don’t just have the opportunity to dedicate their life to literature, or writing or film - but that they can rise to the very top of these industries.

And I’m also very keen to make sure the Vision is directed at our overall mission to level up - that it asks how we can use the creative industries to regenerate left-behind towns and communities, and drive growth across the entire UK.

After all, levelling up isn’t just about transport links and infrastructure projects.

It’s about giving people the chance to live rich and fulfilling lives, wherever they are in the UK. Lives full of creativity and culture, and good jobs in those industries.

Those are my priorities.

But my department will be working closely with the Creative Industries Council to develop the Vision, and I’m keen to hear from the wider sector about what you’d like to see.

We want this piece of work to be really visionary, ambitious and optimistic.

Creative UK - through Caroline Norbury - sits on the Creative Industries Council, and I’m sure she will do a fantastic job at feeding in your views.

There is also a session later this week with my colleague Minister Lopez to discuss some of the priorities that you see for the sector over the next few years.

This will help inform our work on developing the Sector Vision, so don’t miss that! We look forward to hearing your views.

In the meantime, I hope you enjoy the rest of the programme, and that you have a great festival!

Thank you.

Updates to this page

Published 1 February 2022