Chief Executive @CentreforCities and Deputy Director @WhatWorksGrowth. Views my own.

Joined February 2012
187 Photos and videos
Andrew Carter retweeted
🏙️ How are narratives about cities formed? Why do they matter? Do they shape investment and policy?🎙️ @AndrewCities is joined on the podcast by @joshi of @millmediauk, @JaneRockHouse of @birmingham_live and @DaveHill of @OnLondon 🎧👇 buff.ly/ytwC8uh
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Andrew Carter retweeted
manchesterism is real, but do feel there’s some partial telling going on. it’s been a *40 year* project of: 1) city regeneration delivered by close, long-term partnerships between council & repeat developers/investors 2) pro-business council leaders who were entrepreneurial builders & dealmakers, not just speechmakers 3) and yes, more recently, municipal control of core services that has improved quality ie. you need all 3, you can’t just pick and choose i’m sympathetic to municipalisation bc today we are in the worst of all worlds: weak state capacity *and* zombified private markets dominated by rent seekers so given today’s regulatory ratchet was *triggered by privatisation*, public ownership of some natural monopolies & core services could *unlock* market liberalisation for everything else but you have to do both! not just the public control bit
THE CASE FOR MANCHESTERISM by @DantonsHead Ask someone in Wythenshawe or Rochdale whether the buses are better than they were three years ago and they will say yes. Greater Manchester’s Bee Network is the most instructive public transport experiment in Britain not because it is radical in design but because it works. Since franchising began under Andy Burnham’s leadership, passenger numbers have risen for the first time in a generation. Routes have expanded into communities that private operators had abandoned as insufficiently profitable. Fares are capped at levels the deregulated system could not deliver. The model is now spreading. A public operator optimising for coverage and frequency rather than fare recovery serves a social need that private calculation screens out, while reducing system costs through public coordination. Manchesterism  works. Public control of essentials reduces the cost of provision by eliminating the privatisation premium and lowering coordination frictions, which in turn reduces the fiscal transfers required to make essentials accessible – progressively deflating the upward pressure on public spending that currently exposes the country to the harsh judgement of bond markets. Rebuilding public provision is not the alternative to fiscal prudence. It is fiscal prudence. What has been done for buses can be done with similar ambition for energy, water, housing, and care. The architecture operates at multiple scales simultaneously: national corporations for network infrastructure like energy and water, regional and municipal authorities for transport and housing, municipal providers for care and local services. The institutional template is already being built, sector by sector, in the places that have chosen to reclaim public control. That is why this is an argument for Manchesterism rather than a blueprint for Whitehall – its political character is decentralised, plural and democratically accountable. The question is whether national politics has the ambition to match it.
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Andrew Carter retweeted
1/19 London's homebuilding crisis has been in the making for years. And it's not just a matter of "planners saying no", or "London saying no", as some people seem to think.
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Andrew Carter retweeted
Britain’s big cities are not too dense. The issue is where density sits. Manchester and Leeds look large on a 20km ring, but they have far fewer homes close to the centre than peer cities abroad👇 buff.ly/VmzM8Bz
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Andrew Carter retweeted
Join the Centre for Cities team! #hiring We are looking for a highly organised person interested in being part of the fast-paced world of policy and research by supporting the Chief Executive and Head of Finance & Operations as well the events team👇 buff.ly/mR5copk
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Andrew Carter retweeted
Centre for Cities research found that 57% of the UK's productivity lag compared to leading G7 countries is due to the underperformance of its big cities. Today, the Chancellor highlighted the importance of closing this gap in order to boost national growth 👇
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Andrew Carter retweeted
Britain is missing 2.3m urban homes. Our new report shows cities like Manchester, Birmingham and Leeds are far less dense than peers in France and Japan — holding back growth 👇 buff.ly/fkqDTjU
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Andrew Carter retweeted
In the last decade, GM has been the UK’s fastest-growing city region. We are now ready to go further in the next with a plan for good growth, lifting all people and places.
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Andrew Carter retweeted
20 Nov 2025
Everybody loves brownfield-first. But where exactly should we densify our cities? And how? Our new report shows Britain's density gap is wider in the biggest cities outside London than in the capital - and the inner city 'urban cores' up to 5km out from the centre are to blame.
Britain is missing 2.3m urban homes. Our new report shows cities like Manchester, Birmingham and Leeds are far less dense than peers in France and Japan — holding back growth 👇 buff.ly/fkqDTjU
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Andrew Carter retweeted
The official data suggests a productivity convergence between London and other large cities for the first time in more than a decade 📊 ⚠️ But there are reasons to be cautious about this trend. Read more👇 buff.ly/rIYgRG9
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Andrew Carter retweeted
PODCAST | Big cities are catching up 🎙️ @AndrewCities discusses the findings of our latest briefing ‘How productive are the UK’s big cities?’ with Centre for Cities Analyst Yunze Wang. Listen to the podcast🎧👇 buff.ly/9hlgyXt
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Andrew Carter retweeted
For our first fringe event at Conservative Party Conference, we are now starting our In Conversation event with Mayor of Cambridgeshire and Peterborough @paulbristow79
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Andrew Carter retweeted
Kicking off our Conservative Party Conference programme with our Welcome to Manchester Reception. Hearing from Emma Holt @gmchamber, Shadow HCLG Minister @pauljholmes and John Rayson @atkinsrealis.
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Andrew Carter retweeted
PODCAST | My life at Centre for Cities 🎙️ In this very special episode of City Talks @AndrewCities is joined by @Paul_Swinney to reflect on his 16 years at the Centre for Cities. Listen now 👇🎧 buff.ly/PZMXf1B

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How does England's planning system compare to international peers? Big Q that my colleagues @maurice_a_lange and Luka Kovacevic admirably address.
NEW @CentreforCities REPORT OUT TODAY! In Planorama, Luka and I argue that if we want English planning to perform more like its international peers – Germany, France and Japan - it needs to BE more like them. 🧵on what that means…
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Andrew Carter retweeted
PODCAST | Enterprise Zones 🎙️ @AndrewCities is joined by Victoria Sutherland from @whatworksgrowth to discuss their recent rapid evidence review on Enterprise Zones. Listen now 🎧👇
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Andrew Carter retweeted
📢 "The success of the Industrial Strategy hinges on being able to foster innovation in the big cities" @AndrewCities responds to the government's Industrial Strategy👇
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Andrew Carter retweeted
PODCAST | City branding with @INGmedia🎙️ @AndrewCities is joined by @JT_Nunley and @James_ChildCRE to discuss how city branding is changing in a digital world and the implications of these changes for what cities do and should be doing. Listen now🎧👇 buff.ly/9VGlQ0z
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Andrew Carter retweeted
🎙️ NEW PODCAST | Reflections on the Spending Review @AndrewCities and @Paul_Swinney run through the key announcements on economic growth and what they mean for cities. Listen now 🎧 centreforcities.org/podcast/…
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