Government's Industrial Strategy is just re-announced policies & old spending commitments - Rebecca Long-Bailey
Rebecca Long-Bailey MP, Labour’s Shadow Secretary for Business,
Energy and Industrial Strategy, responding to the publication
of the Government’s Industrial Strategy today, said: “This
is a White Paper made up of re-announced policies and old spending
commitments, showing once again that this is a Government short on
details and new ideas. “Nothing in the White Paper will help
give businesses the certainty or incentives they need to...Request free trial
Rebecca Long-Bailey MP, Labour’s Shadow Secretary for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy, responding to the publication of the Government’s Industrial Strategy today, said:
“This is a White Paper made up of re-announced policies and old spending commitments, showing once again that this is a Government short on details and new ideas.
“Nothing in the White Paper will help give businesses the certainty or incentives they need to invest in the face of the Government’s catastrophic handling of Brexit.”
“What detail there is concentrates
“After the Budget last week, the Government’s economic credibility has been shot to pieces. This White Paper falls far short of the change of direction needed to improve our dire productivity, income and GDP growth. Labour’s Industrial Strategy set out a radical programme of investment and genuine partnership between industry and Government, to build an economy for the many, not just the few.”
Ends
Notes to editors
The Government’s lacklustre Industrial Strategy cannot hide seven years of failure
The stated overarching objective of the Government’s industrial strategy is to make the “UK the world’s most innovative nation by 2030”.
This is reminiscent of the Tories’ 2015 manifesto promise to make the UK “the most prosperous major economy in the world by the 2030s”. A commitment they were forced to drop because of their failure on the economy. Today’s industrial strategy will do little to catch up on the failure of the last seven years:
The Government’s so-called ‘five foundations’:
1) Ideas: Raise total R&D investment to 2.4% of GDP by 2027
(ONS, Total GERD by sector of performance: Government, 16 March, 2017
2) People: Establish a technical education system that rivals the best in the world
(House of Commons Library, Adult further education funding in England since 2010, 7 November 2017, http://researchbriefings.parliament.uk/ResearchBriefing/Summary/CBP-7708 )
3) Infrastructure: Increase the National Productivity Investment Fund to £31bn, supporting investment in transport, housing and digital infrastructure
(House of Commons library, Infrastructure policies and investment, 27 June 2017 http://researchbriefings.parliament.uk/ResearchBriefing/Summary/SN06594)
(OECD, UK economic survey 2015: Improving Infrastructure, February 2015 http://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/economics/oecd-economic-surveys-united-kingdom-2015/improving-infrastructure_eco_surveys-gbr-2015-6-en;jsessionid=3b36vj923n8hv.x-oecd-live-02
4) Business Environment: Launch a review of the actions that could be most effective in improving the productivity and growth of small and medium-sized businesses
(ONS, Labour productivity: April to June 2017, 6 October 2017 https://www.ons.gov.uk/employmentandlabourmarket/peopleinwork/labourproductivity/bulletins/labourproductivity/apriltojune2017)
(HMT, Budget 2017, https://www.gov.uk/government/topical-events/autumn-budget-2017)
5) Places: Create a new Transforming Cities fund that will provide £1.7bn for intracity transport. This will fund projects that drive productivity by improving connections within city regions
(National Infrastructure and Construction Pipeline, https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/national-infrastructure-and-construction-pipeline-2016 5 December 2016)
(Source: Labour party research on change in spending power per household from 2011/12 to 2019/20 based on House of Commons library and DCLG spending power 2016 -2017 statistics)
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