48 Britain TheEconomistMarch12th 2022
Thank goodness for government
Britain, payrolled employment
Selected industries, % change Jan 2020-Jan 2022
Source:ONS
2
-10 -5 1050
London Rest of Britain
Hospitality
Artsand entertainment
Transport and storage
Wholesale and retail
Finance and insurance
Construction
Professional services
Health and social work
Administration and support services
Public administration and defence
travellers and tourists dumped their prop
erties on the market. Rents have rebound
ed as the excess is mopped up. Zoopla, a
listings service, says that the number of
rental properties per estate agent has fall
en from a peak of 30 in July 2020 to just 11—
lower than before the pandemic.
Businesses have been less surefooted.
Mat Oakley of Savills, an estate agent, says
that many firms are delaying decisions
about location as they wait for working
habits to settle into a pattern. But those
that do move strongly favour Grade a offic
es—the most appealing kind. In a tight la
bour market firms must coax, rather than
bully, their employees into work. Mr Oak
ley also believes that workers will be given
more space, which will put a brake on of
fice downsizing in response to home
working. They had gradually lost it over the
years: in 2018 more than a third of offices in
London and southeast England had densi
ties higher than one worker per eight
square metres, according to the British
Council for Offices.
Coaxing employees back probably also
means office jobs will remain concentrat
ed in central London, near publictrans
port hubs, rather than dispersing to the
suburbs. Simon Brown of cbre, another
estate agency, recalls that some people
were predicting a decentralisation of offic
es as a result of the pandemic. “That is not
how things have panned out,” he says.
Mr Johnson’s Conservative government
has little time for London, a Labour
dominated city that it seems to have writ
ten off electorally. Its “levelling up” poli
cies are all about boosting the Midlands
and North, and largely overlook the deep
poverty that remains in the capital. It has
provided only shortterm funding for
Transport for London, which is struggling
with a collapse in revenue from Tube fares,
and only after dire warnings that without
support,entirelinesmighthavetoclose.
Thatneglectcouldyetharmthecity.But
one postBrexit policy shift will favour
London.InJanuary 2021 Britainwentfrom
animmigrationsystemthatfavoursEuro
peanstoa systemthatfavourstheglobal
middleclass.Peoplemaybeallowedtoset
tleifa Britishemployerispreparedtopay
them£25,600($33,600),orthegoingrate
fortheirjobinthecountryasa whole.Be
causeLondonsalariesarehigher,manyare
likelytostartthere.Thecityusedtobeby
farthemostimportantgatewaytoBritain.
Itoughttoreclaimthatstatus.n
Satelliteinternet
Failure to launch
I
nmarch 2020 OneWeb,a satelliteinter
net company, filed for bankruptcy after
its biggest funder, SoftBank, a Japanese
tech investor, declined to pump an extra
$2bn into the firm. OneWeb emerged from
bankruptcy in November 2020 clutching
$1bn of fresh capital, including $500m
from Britain’s government for a 33% stake,
reduced to 19% in later investment rounds.
It planned to start selling internet access in
Britain in late 2021 and elsewhere in 2022.
But OneWeb’s timelines have often
slipped. In 2018 Greg Wyler, its founder,
was saying he planned to sell internet con
nectivity in some places in northern lati
tudes by the end of 2019. By the end of 2021
that still had not happened. A planned
2022 “global rollout” already looked un
likely when, on March 2nd, Russia’s space
agency set new preconditions for One
Web’s planned launch from Baikonur, Rus
sia’s main spaceport. OneWeb had to guar
antee that its satellites would not be used
for military purposes. And the British gov
ernment had to relinquish its stake.
Kwasi Kwarteng, Britain’s business sec
retary, rejected the demand to sell up out of
hand. On March 3rd OneWeb suspended
launches from Baikonur. Its 36 satellites
and the Russian rocket they are strapped to
were wheeled back into a shed.
Until then, the task of putting OneWeb’s
satellites in orbit was going well. It had
launched 428, of a planned 648, through a
contract with Arianespace, a French firm
that managed its Russian launches. But
losing Russian launch capacity will set it
back. Other sitesare booked up. One firm
that could offer some capacity, Elon Musk’s
SpaceX, has raced ahead building a com
petitor to OneWeb, launching more than
2,000 satellites. Its Starlink constellation
offers services around the world.
More bigtech money will soon be in or
bit. Kuiper, a subsidiary of Amazon started
in 2019 by Jeff Bezos, then the firm’s boss,
says it will launch its first satellites this
year. Mr Musk’s constellation benefits
from SpaceX’s launch capability. Kuiper
will be able to piggyback on the ground sta
tions Amazon Web Services has built to re
lay signals between satellites, users and
the rest of the internet. OneWeb must
stand on its own.
The loss of launch capacity comes on
top of other problems. A global semicon
ductor shortage means trouble in sourcing
components it needs for ground stations.
Its business model is to sell connectivity
wholesale to other internet service provid
ers, including bt in Britain and at&tin
America. But that means it must rely on
those companies to install the equipment
users need in order to connect to the satel
lite network. Starlink, by contrast, sells di
rectly to consumers as well as wholesale.
OneWeb’s unusual range of share
holders also risks muddling its incentives.
When Britain left the European Union, it
lost any say over Europe’s Galileo naviga
tion system. OneWeb is one of the firms vy
ing to provide it with a replacement. And
so British taxpayers find themselves with a
stake in a satelliteinternet company that
is competing with firms backed by two of
the world’s richest tech barons, one of
which controls the launch capability upon
which OneWeb may soon depend.
The British government’s growing tol
erance for risky investments is part of a
shift in philosophy towards prioritising
ownership and control of strategic tech
nology infrastructure. This has its merits.
But bailing out a capitalintensive busi
ness with deeppocketed competitorsand
a shaky business model always lookedlike
too much risk for too little reward.n
Eighteen months after the government
bailed it out, OneWeb is in trouble
Going nowhere fast