Budget measures announced by the Chancellor are set to put powers
and money in the hands of communities most in need, to help
achieve the Prime Minister’s objective to grow the economy and
level up across the UK. These measures will deliver more jobs,
better services and more opportunities for local people.
A ground breaking devolution package and funding for community
projects in the Budget will help further our ambitions to spread
opportunity more equally.
The measures build on our place-based approach, as set out in the
Government’s Levelling Up White Paper, to ensure targeted
measures which best suit the unique economy, geography and
expertise of each area.
The Government will be working closely with local leaders in key
areas to help attract investment and unleash economic potential.
These initiatives include:
Trailblazer devolution deals
- Two new trailblazer devolution deals will see money and
powers handed directly to the Mayors of the West
Midlands and Greater Manchester,
including a direct funding settlement, devolution of post-19
skills funding and functions and greater control of the
affordable homes programme
- A new framework will ensure that decision-makers in areas
with devolution deals are accountable to their residents and
deliver value for money
- These agreements are designed to pave the way for future
deals in other Mayoral regions
Investment Zones
- Over £400 million for 12 Investment
Zones across the UK to drive business investment and
levelling up, each backed with £80 million over five years
including generous tax incentives. Investment Zones will be based
around research institutions such as universities and will be
focused on driving growth in one of the UK’s key sectors.
- Eight places in England have been shortlisted to develop
proposals in collaboration with the UK Government including the
East Midlands; Greater Manchester; Liverpool; the North East;
South Yorkshire; the Tees Valley; the West Midlands; and West
Yorkshire.
- We are also working closely with the devolved administrations
to establish how Investment Zones in Scotland, Wales and Northern
Ireland will be delivered.
Levelling Up Partnerships
- The rolling out of Levelling Up Partnerships to provide
bespoke place-based regeneration in an initial twenty of
England’s areas most in need of levelling up over 2023-24 and
2024-25.
- Areas will be invited to form partnerships include the City
of Kingston upon Hull, Sandwell, Mansfield, Middlesbrough,
Blackburn with Darwen, Hastings, Torbay, Tendring,
Stoke-on-Trent, Boston, Redcar and Cleveland, Wakefield, Oldham,
Rother, Torridge, Walsall, Doncaster, South Tyneside, Rochdale,
and Bassetlaw.
- This will build on the success of deep dives in Grimsby,
which saw cross-government working to help avoid the effective
closure of the town’s fish processing sector, and in Blackpool,
which unlocked a £100 million regeneration plan.
- Partnership locations have been selected based on the
analysis in the Levelling Up White Paper which considered places
in England against four key metrics: the percentage of adults
with Level 3+ qualifications; Gross Value Added (GVA) per hour
worked; median gross weekly pay; and healthy life expectancy.
- The Government will consult with the Devolved Administrations
and local government to explore potential options in Scotland,
Wales, and Northern Ireland.
Through the Budget the government is also providing money for
levelling up projects which will deliver benefits to communities,
including through:
-
Grants for 16 regeneration projects across England, worth a
combined £211 million, in Blackburn with Darwen, Blackpool,
East Suffolk, Kirklees, London Borough of Waltham Forest,
North East Lincolnshire, Northumberland, Redcar and
Cleveland, Rotherham, Salford, Sandwell, Tameside, Telford
and Wrekin, Tendring, Wigan and Wolverhampton. These are
regeneration projects that can start to spend and deliver
quickly, including funding to revitalise town centres and
transform derelict buildings for use by communities. These
projects, including regeneration of Tipton town centre and a
new skills and education campus in Blackburn, will help
encourage investment, deliver high quality jobs and level up
opportunities. Since the conclusion of the Levelling Up Fund
round two, the department has identified further funding to
support shortlisted regeneration and town centre bids that
were originally made into the Fund.
-
£161 million directly to Mayoral Combined Authorities for 32
regeneration projects in city regions across England,
including business premises and food science facilities in
Tees Valley, and major transport upgrades in the West
Midlands. This funding is designed to give Mayors the
resources they need to level up their areas and strengthen
devolution
-
Levelling up projects in the North West worth around £58
million in total, including transport connectivity
improvements in Rossendale. Following the second round of the
Levelling Up Fund, in which the full £2.1 billion allocation
was awarded, the department is using unallocated departmental
budgets to fund three further bids which narrowly missed out.
-
30 projects across the UK which will receive a total of £7.73
million from the Community Ownership
Fund, bringing valued neighbourhood assets back to the
community, including Tollesby playing fields in Middlesbrough
and Inveraray pier in Argyll & Bute.
The Spring Budget 2023 takes DLUHC’s overall Levelling Up funding
- including our flagship funds and grants - to more than £11
billion. This does not include the billions of pounds of
investment from across Government into schools, transport and
other services.