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Reimagining the creative city

COMMENT Over the past year, Covid-19 has had a devastating effect on people’s lives in cities across the country. Businesses large and small have had to cope with conditions that even the most far-sighted strategist would have been unlikely to predict. Organisations in the cultural sector have faced many of the same tough challenges as those in retail and hospitality. Museums, galleries, theatres and music venues were among the first to close, and have been some of the last to reopen.

Everybody loses when our cultural life is negatively affected. In economic terms, our cultural businesses made a pre-pandemic contribution of nearly £3bn a year in taxes, employing almost 340,000 people. Our creative industries sector was among the fastest growing in the whole UK economy but – important as economic arguments always are – the returns made on public investment in artists, arts companies, museums and libraries have always been so much greater than the purely financial. These organisations are part of the fabric of everyday life in their local communities – a source of happiness, wellbeing, and pride. For many of us, lockdown restrictions preventing us from being able to watch a play, hear live music, visit a museum or borrow library books left a huge hole in our lives.

Looking forward

In response to this crisis, Arts Council England has worked closely with the government to deliver the Culture Recovery Fund in providing an essential lifeline to make sure that our cultural infrastructure is still here for the post-pandemic audiences of today and tomorrow. To make this happen, the chancellor Rishi Sunak and the culture secretary Oliver Dowden have together been the architects of the biggest single investment in culture in our history, totalling some £1.8bn.  

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