| Greater Manchester | |
|---|---|
| Geography | |
| Status: | Ceremonial and Metropolitan county (no county council) |
| Origin: | 1974 |
| Region: | North West England |
| Area: - Total | Ranked 39th 1,276 km² |
| ONS code: | 2A |
| NUTS 2: | UKD3 |
| Demographics | |
| Population: - Total () - Density | Ranked / km² |
| Ethnicity: | 91.1% White 5.6% S.Asian 1.2% Afro-Carib. |
| Politics | |
| Members of Parliament | |
| Hazel Blears, Graham Brady, Andrew Burnham, David Chaytor, Ann Coffey, David Crausby, Jim Dobbin, Paul Goggins, Andrew Gwynne, David Heyes, Beverley Hughes, Mark Hunter, Brian Iddon, Gerald Kaufman, Barbara Keeley, Ruth Kelly, John Leech, Ivan Lewis, Tony Lloyd, Ian McCartney, Michael Meacher, James Purnell, Paul Rowen, Ian Stewart, Graham Stringer, Andrew Stunell, Neil Turner, Phil Woolas | |
| Districts | |
Greater Manchester's county council was abolished in 1986, and so its districts are now effectively unitary authorities. The county however, still exists legally, and is also a ceremonial county.
Prior to its creation, the name Selnec had been used for the area, from the initials 'South East Lancashire North East Cheshire'.
Greater Manchester borders with the ceremonial counties of Cheshire (including Warrington), Derbyshire, West Yorkshire, Lancashire (including Blackburn with Darwen) and Merseyside.
As well as Manchester, the county includes major centres such as Bolton, Oldham, Rochdale, Bury, Stockport and Wigan. Greater Manchester is not entirely built-up. Although Manchester forms a conurbation along with Salford, Trafford, Oldham and Stockport, other towns, such as Bury, Rochdale and Wigan are clearly separate.
For the first twelve years after the county was created in 1974, the county had a two-tier system of local government, and the metropolitan borough councils shared power with the Greater Manchester County Council.
However in 1986, along with the five other metropolitan county councils and the Greater London Council, the Greater Manchester County Council was abolished, and most of its powers were devolved to the boroughs, which became effective unitary authorities.
Despite the abolition of the county council, the boroughs jointly administer some services on a county-wide basis. Including:
These are administered by joint-boards which are made up of councillors appointed from each of the ten boroughs.
The authorities of Greater Manchester are represented by the Association of Greater Manchester Local Authorities (AGMLA). Which meets to create a co-ordinated county-wide approach to many issues.
The boroughs jointly own the Manchester Airport Group which controls Manchester International Airport and several other UK airports. Other services are directly funded and managed by the local councils.
Greater Manchester is a Ceremonial county with a Lord-Lieutenant, and is still recognised for statistical purposes.
Before 1974 the area of Greater Manchester was split between Cheshire, Lancashire and the West Riding of Yorkshire with numerous parts being independent county boroughs. A comparable area was informally known as 'SELNEC', for 'South East Lancashire North East Cheshire'.
SELNEC had been proposed by the Redcliffe-Maud Report of 1969 as a 'metropolitan area'. This had roughly the same northern boundary as today's Greater Manchester, but covered much more territory in north-east Cheshire - including Macclesfield and Warrington. It also covered Glossop in Derbyshire.
In 1969 a SELNEC Passenger Transport Authority was set up, which covered an area smaller than the proposed SELNEC, but different to the eventual Greater Manchester. Compared to the Redcliffe-Maud area it excluded Macclesfield, Warrington, and Knutsford, but still including Glossop and Saddleworth, in the West Riding of Yorkshire. Unusually, it excluded Wigan, which was in both the Redcliffe-Maud area and in the eventual Greater Manchester.
Although the Redcliffe-Maud report was rejected by the Conservative government after the 1970 general election, it was committed to local government reform, and accepted the need for a county based on Manchester. Its original proposal was much smaller than the Redcliffe-Maud Report's SELNEC, but further fringe areas such as Wilmslow, Warrington and Glossop were trimmed from the edges and remained instead in the shire counties. Other late changes included the separation of a proposed Bury/Rochdale authority into the Metropolitan Borough of Bury and the Metropolitan Borough of Rochdale. Greater Manchester was eventually established in 1974.
| Year | Regional Gross Value Added | Agriculture | Industry | Services |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1995 | 15,242 | 32 | 4,077 | 11,133 |
| 2000 | 21,604 | 20 | 4,879 | 16,705 |
| 2003 | 24,950 | 26 | 4,788 | 20,136 |
This is a chart of trend of regional gross value added of Greater Manchester North at current basic prices published (pp.240-253) by Office for National Statistics with figures in millions of British Pounds Sterling.
| Year | Regional Gross Value Added | Agriculture | Industry | Services |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1995 | 10,126 | 27 | 4,267 | 5,833 |
| 2000 | 11,391 | 18 | 3,938 | 7,435 |
| 2003 | 13,350 | 22 | 4,185 | 9,143 |
includes hunting and forestry
includes energy and construction
includes financial intermediation services indirectly measured
Components may not sum to totals due to rounding
Greater Manchester | Metropolitan counties
Gran Manchester | Manceinion Fwyaf | Greater Manchester | Gran Manchester | Greater Manchester | Grand Manchester | Greater Manchester | Greater Manchester | Stor-Manchester | Большой Манчестер | Veľký Manchester | Greater Manchester
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Greater Manchester".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world