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Use universities as technology support centres, government told

Former prime minister鈥檚 thinktank suggests higher education institutions could help solve Britain鈥檚 productivity crisis with German-style support system

Published on
November 24, 2025
Last updated
November 24, 2025
 Unrecognized people visit Apple, American multinational technology company booth during CEE 2016.
Source: iStock/Panama7

Policymakers should establish university 鈥渢echnology adoption centres鈥 to help upgrade the UK鈥檚 digital infrastructure and boost productivity, according to a new report.

The Tony Blair Institute (TBI) has called on the UK government to make technology adoption central to its national growth strategy and has suggested that universities could form the backbone of this.

In a , the thinktank argues that聽innovation alone will not deliver economic growth. 鈥淭he greater prize lies in diffusion 鈥 the adoption and spread of available technologies across the wider economy,鈥 the paper says.

However, it suggests that part of Britain鈥檚 鈥減roductivity problem鈥 is the 鈥渟luggish鈥 adoption of new technologies, with UK firms struggling with knowing what to adopt, as well as how to make new technologies 鈥渨ork and stick鈥.聽聽

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The TBI says closing the UK鈥檚 鈥渄iffusion gap鈥 could boost gross domestic product by more than 拢6 billion by the end of this parliament if the government makes technology adoption a 鈥渃entral part鈥 of its growth strategy.

It proposes leaning on universities to help do this, including establishing a network of government-funded university-based centres that 鈥渢rain leaders, embed expert advisors and connect firms through peer-learning networks鈥.

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鈥淐hange is possible within this parliament: the UK does not require costly new institutions, just better use of and stronger links between the ones it already has,鈥 the report says.

It gives the example of Germany鈥檚 Mittlestand-Digital programme, which has established a national system of 25 regional centres, mostly hosted at universities, offering impartial advice focused on the implementation of technology.

Currently, universities remain 鈥渦nderused鈥, the report says.

鈥淲hile world-leading in research and spinouts, universities have little presence in helping non-R&D-intensive SMEs adopt proven technologies.

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鈥淢any business owners still report that they do not know who to talk to when engaging their local university.鈥

Ryan Wain, senior director of policy and politics at the TBI, said it was time to 鈥渟top beating [universities] with a political stick and recognise them as the world-class institutions they are鈥.

鈥淯niversities have become proxies in a seemingly endless culture war when they should be Britain鈥檚 engines of growth,鈥 he continued.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e brimming with the expertise to drive the technology revolution 鈥 one that will define the next era of growth 鈥 but they must adapt too. Training and skills are the front line of this revolution, and universities are where it must begin.

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鈥淚f government wants to end decline and spark renewal, it must choose universities as the vehicle for change, and universities must step up to lead.鈥

Vivienne Stern, chief executive of Universities UK, said:聽鈥淚f you are looking for reasons to be optimistic about the future of the UK, our universities are a good place to start.聽It鈥檚 great to see this report recognise how they can play a central role in driving tech adoption, building on things that universities are already doing right across the country.

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鈥淲henever I visit a university, I see facilities that help local and global business work out how to make the most of emerging technologies, drawing on university kit and expertise. We can build on that and drive greater take up of innovative technologies that will help British business grow faster.鈥

helen.packer@timeshighereducation.com

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