Sally-Ann Hart (Hastings and Rye) (Con) I beg to move, That this
House has considered the status of local enterprise partnerships.
It is a pleasure to speak under your chairmanship, Ms Rees, and I
thank everyone for attending the debate. I am delighted to have
secured the debate at such a critical time for local enterprise
partnerships, when strategic, business-led, local economic growth
remains in rather a state of suspended animation following the LEP
review....Request free trial
(Hastings and Rye)
(Con)
I beg to move,
That this House has considered the status of local enterprise
partnerships.
It is a pleasure to speak under your chairmanship, Ms Rees, and I
thank everyone for attending the debate.
I am delighted to have secured the debate at such a critical time
for local enterprise partnerships, when strategic, business-led,
local economic growth remains in rather a state of suspended
animation following the LEP review. In East Sussex, we have been
well-served by LEPs over the past 10 years and I am delighted
that my right hon. Friend the Secretary of State for Levelling Up
recognised and affirmed the vital role that LEPs can continue to
play in the recent levelling-up White Paper. It would have been
all too easy for him to have looked for a headline and to have
announced the creation of successor bodies, so I congratulate him
for the leadership and common sense that he has shown on the
issue.
That said, the sector is in limbo as it awaits clarity on its
future role and, critically, confirmation of the funding it needs
to fulfil it. That is creating an inability to plan, and the
continued uncertainty has seen some of our most talented people
leave LEPs. It is also having an impact on our business leaders,
who give their time and experience in support of their local
areas. They will not stay at the table for long if the
uncertainty continues or if they do not feel valued.
It is six weeks to the day since at the levelling-up White Paper
was published and LEPs have very much welcomed its conclusions.
The value of LEPs is based on an array of evidence about their
impact across the country, and a visit to any of their websites
or social media platforms will demonstrate the huge amount of
work that is under way. Only last week, the Under-Secretary of
State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, my hon. Friend the
Member for Croydon South (), who is the Minister with
responsibility for the digital economy, was in Hull to launch the
latest LEP local digital skills partnership, which equips people
across Hull and East Yorkshire with the skills needed to support
the region’s digital jobs boom and to ensure that more residents
can benefit from the thriving local tech sector. LEPs are also
home to, and work closely with, world-leading sector champions,
from creative industries, cyber and net zero through to defence
and space. LEPs are already bringing together critical clusters
to support innovation and turbocharge growth.
In research and development and innovation, LEPs are making
groundbreaking advances based on high-tech economic clusters.
They are demonstrating their value in a way that is crystal
clear, whether through cell and gene therapy in Hertfordshire,
the first test flight of a hybrid electric aircraft in the
south-west, developing new agri-tech systems in the midlands,
strengthening cyber-security technology in Gloucestershire,
automation and robotics in Oxfordshire, or building new supply
lines for future electric vehicles in Coventry. Some of the
largest stand-out examples of innovation are driven by LEPs,
which was also cited in the White Paper.
In my own beautiful constituency of Hastings and Rye, the South
East local enterprise partnership, or SELEP, has had a major
impact thanks to its ability to convene partners, build strong
relationships and help to put the required structures and
processes in place to help local businesses thrive.
(Slough) (Lab)
I commend the hon. Member for having secured a debate on LEPs,
because the LEP in my own Thames valley region does a great deal
of work to bring together businesses, local government, the third
sector and higher education so that they work collectively not
just for our region but for UK plc. Does she agree that when
those groups are all talking in unison and agreeing with the
likes of myself that we need to build a western rail link to
Heathrow, which is the No.1 infrastructure priority in our
region, the Government should agree to such work rather than
delaying it, as is currently the case?
(in the Chair)
Order. It is nice to see that you have not lost your technique
for long interventions, Mr Dhesi.
The hon. Member for Slough (Mr Dhesi) makes a good point about
partnership working, but I cannot comment on the western Heathrow
link as I do not know enough about it.
Turning to skills, LEPs have significant success in the sector,
in particular through skills advisory panels. Business feeds
directly into that SAP data and relies on the cross-co-operation
and capacity of LEPs to gather and deliver that level of
information at scale. No other organisation does that locally and
it connects directly with the aims of the Government’s proposed
unit for future skills. LEPs also co-fund the Careers and
Enterprise Company’s enterprise adviser network, which has
brought nearly 3,000 business volunteers into schools to support
and stimulate vital career choices for students. The convening
role of the LEPs has boosted the benefits, scale and reach of
that partnership, enabling more business stakeholders to connect
directly with local schools.
Furthermore, LEPs work in cross-partnership to deliver solid
results for their skills boot camps and institutes of technology,
addressing skills needed in green technology, the heavy goods
vehicle and logistics sector, digital, advanced manufacturing and
the construction sector. Again, that helps to deliver on another
White Paper ambition to resolve acute national and local skills
shortages.
Only last week, the Higher Education Commission launched its
latest report on innovation, again highlighting the central role
that LEPs can play in driving innovation across our regions. More
broadly, LEPs have played a critical role in supporting our local
small and medium-sized enterprises through the pandemic and the
recovery, too. That is absolutely right in East Sussex.
(Rugby) (Con)
I was delighted to hear my hon. Friend refer to the work of the
Coventry and Warwickshire LEP in supporting suppliers of the
electric vehicle supply chain. She talked about SMEs, and the
Coventry and Warwickshire LEP has supported 5,500 businesses,
organising a whole range of roundtables. Is not the great
strength of LEPs that they bring private sector expertise into an
area that was originally only for the public sector?
I completely agree with my hon. Friend. The commerciality of the
minds in the LEP adds to the local authorities, giving that broad
cross-section of expertise.
In the past year alone, 1.6 million businesses turned to their
local LEP growth hub for advice and support. During the most
challenging times of the pandemic, LEPs designed and delivered
more than 100 local initiatives, targeting help and support to
give local businesses the best chance at survival. They played a
similar role in preparation for exiting the EU. They are now
looking at how global challenges are impacting on local business.
The intel is fed into central Government weekly, providing
real-time data and insight. LEPs have shown it, the White Paper
confirms it, and I am confident from my discussions with my local
LEP that they have a unique role to play in the future.
The LEP structure, however, of regional collaboration with public
and private organisations and individuals, with a unique focus on
improving local economic growth, is potentially under threat. Six
weeks on from the review, LEPs have no confirmation of their
future role nor, more critically, how or whether they will be
funded to fulfil that role—hence I am here today to ask the
Minister for clarity on that important issue. We must turn the
words of the White Paper into tangible policy. Action is now a
matter of urgency.
In conclusion—though quite a long conclusion—I would welcome the
Minister’s consideration of the following points. The Government
must please clearly define and establish the future functions of
LEPs and make them clear to all parties. If the functions are not
clear, or no obligation to consult them is made, any meaningful
role will simply be lost to posterity in future structures.
It is vital that the local independent business voice of LEPs is
safeguarded for it to be engaged in local economic planning and
decision making, and that the LEPs’ local government partners
recognise that. More than 2,000 local business leaders offer
their time and expertise through LEPs to support their local
economies. They are an asset that we cannot afford to lose.
Involving that local voice in devolution agreements will help to
keep business around the table. The private sector expertise and
investment has many regional benefits and we need to encourage a
culture of enterprise and engagement.
We also need to recognise that LEPs’ business acumen is already
helping to identify and drive some of the biggest groundbreaking
economic clusters in the country, generating jobs and pulling in
more private sector leverage than public finance alone. In one
example, a LEP’s brokering capability generated an investment
ratio of 12:1 for a local sector cluster, and it is still
increasing. That capability, at minimal cost to the public purse,
could simply disappear if we do not clearly establish their
function now. It is not the number of allocated capital pots that
counts; it is about LEPs having the ability to influence how that
capital is spent. That is really fundamental.
For many, the journey to devolution could be a lengthy one. The
White Paper suggest that it is a decade-long ambition, and some
suggest even longer. In some areas, there may be no greater
appetite for Mayors or county deals than we currently see, and
the focus on immediate mayoral combined authorities reflects only
about 32% of all areas, because approximately 68% of LEPs are not
covered by MCAs. LEPs rely on European funding to support skills
and deliver projects, so they will therefore need to access the
UK shared prosperity fund to do the same, as the vast majority
will not be in MCAs. Ultimately, we need to identify the
functions and pathways for LEPs outside MCAs.
Through their unique collaboration and local business voice, LEPs
broker investments that deliver the jobs, environment and local
taxes that local communities need and depend on. It is now vital
to ensure that LEPs have the teeth and funding, so that they can
continue to develop the opportunities that play such a
significant part in levelling up the entire country from north to
south and east to west, including our coastal communities.
(in the Chair)
I would like to start the wind-ups at 5.12 pm in order to give
a couple of minutes to sum
up at the end. I do not think there is any need to put a time
limit on speeches, as long as you are kind to one another.
4.42pm
(Buckingham) (Con)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Ms Rees. I
congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for Hastings and Rye
() on securing an important
debate for all local enterprise partnerships up and down the
land. Indeed, since 2010, local enterprise partnerships have been
integral to growth. The contribution that LEPs make to the
prosperity of the nation is invaluable, and I want to make the
case as to why nowhere is that more clear than in the country of
Buckinghamshire.
The Buckinghamshire local enterprise partnership has played a
vital role in determining local economic priorities and driving
job creation, workforce skills and growth. It is quite a
startling statistic that 55% of all new commercial and industrial
employment space in the county of Buckinghamshire over the past
five years has been delivered on the local enterprise
partnership-managed enterprise zone sites at Westcott, which is
wholly in my constituency, Silverstone Park, which is roughly
half in my constituency and half in that of my right hon. Friend
the Member for South Northamptonshire (Dame ), and a further site next
door, which is in the constituency of my hon. Friend the Member
for Aylesbury ().
With 14,000 active members, the LEP’s Buckinghamshire Business
First growth hub has filled the void and delivered a unified
business voice across the county. Let me give a few examples.
Over the 12 months from the start of the covid crisis, it
provided 65,000 essential business assists. Ahead of any of the
Government support that was announced and delivered, the LEP
covid recovery fund provided £1.6 million directly into business
survival and it was the first LEP in the country to act in such a
way. The impact is clear: all 62 businesses supported are still
trading, 197 new jobs have already been created and 258 have been
safeguarded.
The LEP skills hub in Buckinghamshire is ranked No. 1 in the
country by the Careers and Enterprise Company. Buckinghamshire is
the first area in the country to have enterprise advisors active
in every state school in the county, and the LEP’s annual skills
show is the biggest single skills event in the south-east of
England. The LEP has supported transformative projects such as
Pinewood Studios in the constituency of my hon. Friend the Member
for Beaconsfield (), which has helped the UK
film industry grow by 18% in the last five years. Those are some
incredible examples. I could give more, but time is against me.
By working more closely together, local enterprise partnerships
will continue to maximise job creation, growth and real
investment right across the country, delivering long-term,
meaningful results, particularly for communities outside
London.
Brexit was about removing the distortions created by European
Union membership, doing things differently in ways that work
better for the communities we serve and promoting productivity
and prosperity. LEPs are an integral part of that vision. There
has never been a more exciting time to be involved with local
enterprise partnerships, not least in Buckinghamshire, where our
LEP has invested wisely. Its capital programme funds have been
recycled. Investment loans have been repaid and enterprise income
secured—all to enable Buckinghamshire to operate independently of
taxpayer support if necessary. As my hon. Friend the Member for
Hastings and Rye said, LEPs need certainty. I hope my hon. Friend
the Minister will give us some reassuring words and actions.
4.46pm
(Stroud) (Con)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Ms Rees. I
thank my hon. Friend the Member for Hastings and Rye (), who made some valid
points. We are all here seeking certainty, and I hope to hear
more information from the Minister, as many of our LEPs have
contacted us asking for clarity.
I work closely with the GFirst LEP in Gloucestershire. My patch
is Stroud. Even before my election, the LEP was really helpful.
It was easy to approach and had a helpful team. It is packed full
of a diverse range of skills and made up of local businesses
across Gloucestershire. I find that it shares my attitude that,
in Stroud, it is getting things done that matters to people. That
means working with everybody, regardless of party politics, and
making sure that the people they are engaging with can make a
difference. I find that an effective, pragmatic approach—and one
that is not always present in all aspects of an MP’s life as we
try to move things forward.
I have inherited many projects that are decades old and need some
attention and a bit of a kick up the backside. The LEP assists me
with that. A key aspect of the LEP and the work I do with it is
in harnessing the power of businesses in the private sector, as
my hon. Friend the Member for Rugby () mentioned. Private sector
businesses are our job makers and wealth creators and are vital
in getting things done. If we do not have their brains and
aptitude on certain issues, things fall down, particularly when
they get mired in long-term squabbles.
It is important that we think carefully about the future of LEPs.
I have no issue with that. I know from speaking to colleagues
across the House that not all LEPs are performing brilliantly and
we have to acknowledge that. The word “patchy” comes up when
people talk about local enterprise partnerships and there are
questions about the value that they bring to some areas—not mine,
but others.
It is also safe to say that not all work with their local MPs and
their local community champions of councils and councillors. Some
operate as mysterious benevolent bodies doling out millions of
pounds of taxpayers’ money. They make no reference at all to the
Government or local businesses and community champions that could
give them some guidance about the best place to spend that money.
I understand why the Minister and his team are looking at LEPs,
particularly as we are looking at new models of devolution, but I
do not want the Government to throw the baby out with the bath
water.
I will go through a few of the projects that we have been working
on locally. We have growth hubs in our college. It is an ambition
of our Skills and Post-16 Education Bill work with the Department
for Education that we bring businesses into our further education
colleges. We are already doing that through the work of the LEP,
including by providing net zero advice and supporting businesses.
I have some fantastic local businesses in my area, such as The
Boys Who Sew, which have valued the advice and support. We have a
huge bid request in to host the world’s first fusion power
station in my patch, which has involved every single aspect of
local enterprise; a LEP is certainly a big part and player in
that. The GFirst LEP chairs in the western gateway area are all
members on the gateway board, so we work closely together.
I want to give credit to my hon. and learned Friend the Member
for Cheltenham ()—he would be here, but having
been elevated to Solicitor General, he is not allowed to join in
these debates—who, working closely with the GFirst LEP, has
worked tirelessly to create the cyber-cluster for Cheltenham,
Gloucestershire and the western gateway. It was one of the
discussion topics at the inaugural meetings for the western
gateway and it is now actually happening, so we can certainly
chalk that up as a win.
On skills, we have a joint portal between the county council and
the GFirst LEP, and an employment charter, which is being piloted
across the county at the moment, involving about 20 employers and
a number of schools. We also have 10 business sector groups. As
my hon. Friend the Member for Hastings and Rye said, if we delay
making decisions or giving those groups certainty, we will lose
those busy people. They are not going to stick around; they will
go and join another group if they can see that that is worth
while.
In essence, LEPs can improve by being more transparent and
helping more people to understand what they are there for. They
can do better at showing where the money is coming from and why
they are spending it, and they can work better in some areas with
their MPs, councils and councillors. However, I support what they
are doing—certainly in Gloucestershire—and I hope we are able to
give them certainty so that they are able to plan and continue
doing good work. As Government work with the levelling-up fund
and the prosperity fund comes along the line, we have a lot to
do. LEPs are a big part of that.
4.52pm
(Northampton South) (Con)
I thank you for your chairmanship, Ms Rees, and I thank my hon.
Friend the Member for Hastings and Rye () for securing this debate.
The debate around LEPs is of particular interest to me because
when I was leader of Derbyshire County Council from 2009 to 2013,
I was there, in the thick of it, when the old regional
development agencies were dissolved and the new concept of local
enterprise partnerships was created. I helped to create D2N2 and
sat on the board of that LEP for some years, so I had a ringside
seat in terms of the strengths and weaknesses that the new
organisation brought to the table.
One great weakness was that there was a lot of overlap: different
areas were in all sorts of different LEPs, which caused all sorts
of problems. There was, perhaps, a weakness of political will in
the centre, with that sort of washing machine salesman theory of
politics: someone creates something exciting, and for six months
Ministers talk about it as the great solution to everything;
then, something else comes along and interests fade or
distractions happen.
I got a sense of that when I was the Member of the European
Parliament for the East Midlands, where I was the European
Conservatives and Reformists group co-ordinator for the Committee
on Regional Development. It was certainly clear there that
regions were still where it was at, whatever we had decided to do
in England. From 12 months after the creation of LEPs, the
background of a lack of central focus and drive was sometimes
quite apparent.
Since my election as Member of Parliament for Northampton South
in 2017, I have worked closely with SEMLEP, the South East
Midlands Local Enterprise Partnership, on a range of issues such
as local town regeneration, company growth funding pots and
larger, more ambitious investment programmes—it is almost a sort
of Voldemort moment—such as the Oxford to Cambridge arc. Over the
past 12 to 13 years, I have seen what works well and what does
not work so well, and I have some general observations to make
from my experience, given the current time and context. Policy
initiatives such as levelling up are hitting the ground just as
the economically damaging covid emergency finally recedes and
just in time for a whole new set of economic pressures. This fits
in well with my time and role on the Levelling Up, Housing and
Communities Committee and as chairman of the devolution all-party
parliamentary group.
First, LEPs are not perfect. There are issues around geography;
not all LEPs fall very neatly within boundaries. There are some
perceived overlaps, and in the case of the Oxford-Cambridge arc,
we could see some perceived underlaps. It is worth noting that
the Oxford-Cambridge arc LEPs tried to adapt and co-operate with
other LEPs to meet the milestones. That has been encouraging, but
the arc is not in the levelling-up White Paper, and now there is
an explosion of question marks around it and its future.
The LEPs themselves are not perfect, but they are there. They
have a pool of critical knowledge, expertise and relationships to
draw from. The machine works pretty well, so I would like the
Minister to speak about the changes and whether growth funding
pots will go through LEPs henceforth. Now, at this critical
juncture, might not be the time to mess around with
organisational architecture, tempting though it may be. We should
not make the perfect the enemy of the good.
There are always risks. When Northamptonshire Enterprise
Partnership dissolved a couple of years ago, not only the senior
leadership but almost the entire staff—with their deep wells of
knowledge and, critically, their interpersonal
relationships—disappeared overnight. It has taken time for those
gaps to be filled, a phenomenon that my hon. Friends the Members
for Stroud () and for Hastings and Rye
have referred to. I have personally had a good relationship with
SEMLEP, and I am loth to start all over again when my focus in
this instance is not so much on the vehicle as the destinations,
looking for progress, not perfection.
My constituency has many challenges, as do the greater
geographies of counties and regions, but they also have great
opportunities for improvements, which is what our focus should be
on. LEPs have the economic expertise, relationships, knowledge
and history of public-private partnerships that we can draw on
heavily. As my noble Friend said many years ago, I have a
little list, but I will simply say that Northampton has seen some
great achievements through the LEPs, including the Vulcan
ironworks, MAHLE Powertrain, Northampton College’s advanced
engineering centre and digital skills academy, and MK:5G. Of
course, there is displacement theory in the economy—just because
money has been spent here, it does not necessarily mean it would
not have been spent better by companies themselves, or elsewhere.
This is spending packaged as investment; it is still taxpayers’
money. Nevertheless, that is a list of positive projects.
The LEP investment independent evaluation said that the return on
investment for the whole programme will be £9 for every £1, so
there is some good stuff there. I am always slightly suspicious
of ROI figures—it always seems slightly like the Del Boy theory
of investments: “Next year, we will be millionaires”—but
nevertheless there is some good ROI there that can be effectively
demonstrated. LEPs often operate on a larger scale than a local
authority, but are obviously smaller and nimbler than central
Government. They therefore have an important part to play in the
delivery of our local growth and investment plans, imperfect as
they are—imperfect as we all are.
4.59pm
(Nottingham North)
(Lab/Co-op)
It is a pleasure to serve with you in the Chair, Ms Rees. I
congratulate the hon. Member for Hastings and Rye () on securing this important
debate and on the case she made, particularly for the value of
LEPs. Many of her points about the role of LEPs in skills,
business development and attracting inward investment were well
made, but I particularly liked her point about their power in
terms of convening. That is one value that has been harder to
quantify, but it is absolutely important, and when the Minister
closes, I hope he will talk about the need for greater certainty
—I will make some points about that myself—because that is a
clear message that is coming back to all of us. LEPs have shown
the value of bringing business together and giving it the chance
to help shape a place and the future of local economies. That has
been a real success of the model.
I tried to keep pace with the hon. Member for Buckingham (). In the end, I wrote down
“sheer volume” for the wonderful achievements in the Bucks LEP. I
was struck by 55% of new starts being in the enterprise zones,
which really shows the impact in that community. That relates to
the point made by the hon. Member for Stroud () about getting things
done, which is what our constituents want and what we all want
for our communities. We talk about long-term projects, but we
want to get things done, get the economy moving, get people in
work and get them the right skills. Those points were well
made.
The hon. Member for Northampton South () sold himself short. My LEP
is Derby, Derbyshire, Nottingham and Nottinghamshire—D2N2—and the
hon. Gentleman was a founder director. It is widely accepted
across the patch that it has done a very good job. Those things
were very difficult at that time; looking back, it seems a lot
easier. He made some points about geography, which was a
contested issue in our part of the world at the time, as was the
structure. The transition from regional development agencies to
the LEP model was quite painful. The hon. Gentleman is widely
considered to have done a very good job. That shows that, as well
as the value of business in these bodies, there is still, and
always will be, an important place for local politicians in
shaping a place, whether that is leaders of councils or economic
development leads on councils. We should always want them to be
part of the work, because the value is in the rich partnership
between the public and private sector. There is real opportunity
in that.
I do not want to go past the point about geography and overlaps
and underlaps, because we are going to go through that now—on
steroids—as we move now into the next phase of the levelling-up
White Paper and the different plans around devolution. There was
some interest when it was about local economic partnerships, but
in reality we knew that most of our constituents would not
particularly connect with the issue. But they are going to when
it starts being about mayoralties and combined authorities, and
we are really going to have those conversations, so some of that
insight and experience will be very welcome.
Local economic partnerships have been an important forum. In my
own community, D2N2 covers 2 million people with an output of £45
billion, and it aims to add another £9 billion. That is the scale
of the ambition. The LEP has brought real expertise, and a
co-ordinating role, as the hon. Member for Stroud said. That has
been particularly clear during the pandemic, where it has pulled
the partners together to assist people back into work, to steer
local investment and to support businesses to grow. We have been
very lucky to have it.
It would be remiss of me not to mention the predecessor bodies.
For us, that was the East Midlands Development Agency. In
general, regional development agencies were good bodies. I know
that the hon. Member for Northampton South does not like the ROI
stats, but the evidence for RDAs was very good in that regard,
and I feel that the changes were a false economy—a cost-cutting
measure. I am not advocating a return to that system, but the
governance model we have today, with a partnership between local
politicians and local business, plus the heft of the support that
RDAs had, might be a better way forward. I would be interested to
hear what the Minister foresees.
We face significant challenges in our economy. We have had
anaemic growth for a decade. We can have a big argument about why
that is, but it is still the reality. When we look at wage
growth, I do not even think it would qualify even as anaemic. The
Bank of England is predicting economic growth to be as low as 1%
by 2024. Whatever our economic plans, LEPs have to be there to
jump-start our economy. There are elements of the levelling-up
White Paper that start to address the situation, in concept and
rhetoric, and there is lots that we would all agree with, but we
now need to hear from Ministers about more than the concept, and
about how we are going to tackle the failed model of
over-centralisation and genuinely shift power from the
centre—from Whitehall to town hall, and then from those town
halls to communities themselves. We know that that is what
communities want and that when people are treated well and are
given the opportunity, they do well. I fear that, in the long
journey between now and 2030, if we go on another trip around the
deal-making process and the piecemeal model of devolution, it
will be very slow and will frustrate progress. I think we can go
faster and I hope the Minister might reflect on that.
The White Paper says that the Government are
“encouraging the integration of LEPs and their business boards
into MCAs, the GLA and County Deals”.
Many LEPs have welcomed that but, very much in the spirit of the
comments of the hon. Member for Hastings and Rye in opening the
debate, they want to know more about that transition. The White
Paper said that further detail would be provided in writing to
LEPs, Will the Minister say when that happened or will
happen?
I will finish with a couple of quick questions. We are moving
into an age of more individual, personalised government. I have
to say, that is not to my taste. I think the superman model of
leadership is a dated and failed one—and they are virtually
always men. I like a Cabinet Government; I think more heads are
better together. The value in the LEPs was that they brought
together a rich mix of partners. They are very busy people with
very important day jobs, and they are going to need to know that
their work is valued. If they are downgraded to a business
sounding board for a Mayor, then that will be a challenging
process. Otherwise, if we are putting all accountability on an
individual personage, where will LEPs fit in to that? I am keen
to hear what the Minister has to say about that.
The White Paper announced three new innovation accelerators. Can
the Minister provide some detail on how LEPs and local government
are expected to interact with those? Will they have genuine power
and a say in them? Similarly, how will LEPs engage with the new
levelling-up directors and the Levelling Up Advisory Council, and
how will they provide feedback? We have seen a general sense of
enthusiasm for sub-regional business and political leadership on
important matters of developing the economy. Saying that sounds
almost facile, but that is what we are all saying. We are now
moving into a new context through the levelling-up programme.
There are many questions that need to be answered, so I hope that
we might start to hear answers from the Minister today.
5.06pm
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Levelling Up,
Housing and Communities (Neil O'Brien)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Ms Rees. I
start by thanking my hon. Friend the Member for Hastings and Rye
() for securing this
important debate. It has been inspirational to hear the many
varied things that LEPs are doing across the country: in the
south-east, Thames valley, Coventry, Warwickshire,
Buckinghamshire, Gloucestershire, and D2N2 in Northamptonshire
and the south midlands. They are doing everything from heritage
to digital skills and, indeed, fusion power. They have a very
exciting agenda and are playing an important role.
The short answer to my hon. Friend the Member for Hastings and
Rye is that, through the White Paper, LEPs now have certainty
about their overall role in the future and how they will fit
together with mayoral combined authorities. LEPs will continue to
exist where there are no MCAs; where MCAs exist, they can be
folded in as the business sounding board where they are
co-terminus. Where there is a part-in and part-out LEP, we will
respond to whatever the desires of local partners are. They will
also shortly have the funding certainty that a number have
Members have asked about, because we will be writing to them very
shortly.
The longer version of the answer to the great questions that
colleagues have asked today is that LEPs have played a very
important role in unlocking local economic potential and growth
over recent years. Using the convening power that so many Members
have talked about, partnerships have forged lasting and
productive relationships between business, education and local
government. At the same time, they have brought that crucial
private sector perspective into local decision making, and indeed
into combined authorities. They have delivered major capital
investment schemes, some of which have been mentioned today, such
as the £12 billion local growth fund and the £900 million Getting
Building fund.
LEPs have been really instrumental in supporting businesses
through the twin challenges of leaving the EU and responding to
the pandemic. As if that were not enough, a lot of businesses are
now turning to their LEP and growth hub for guidance and support
regarding the current situation with the Russian invasion of
Ukraine. As my hon. Friend the Member for Hastings and Rye said,
that is just part of what is driving the 1.6 million visits that
she talked about.
Over the past two-year period we have seen LEPs implement a
series of actions to strengthen their governance and
accountability, and it has made a big difference. In the most
recent assurance review we found that every one of the 38 LEPs
met our expectations on strategic impact and delivery, and all
but one met our expectations on governance. The National Audit
Office has noted the progress that LEPs have made over time. In
its 2019 report, the NAO highlighted the marked improvement in
LEPs’ financial transparency between 2016 and 2019. My hon.
Friend the Member for Northampton South () touched on the marked
progress we have seen on the removal of boundary issues between
LEPs—an issue that the Government recognise can blur
accountability and transparency. Although there is further to go,
the majority of those boundary issues have now been dealt
with.
I want to thank the people working in LEPs who might watch this
debate or read the transcript, because the Government place a
huge value on the contribution that they have made and will
continue to make to their local economy. We are grateful to the
talented, busy people who serve on LEPs for giving their skills,
knowledge and expertise to the community and to improve the
functioning of LEPs over time. We look forward to the next stage
in our partnership with LEPs.
In some areas of the country, such as the Liverpool city region,
West Yorkshire and Greater London, business leaders are
effectively integrated into local decision-making structures
through combined authorities and the GLA. As Members know, LEP
partnerships extend beyond their immediate combined authorities.
In a LEP census in 2016, nine out of 10 LEPs reported that they
have full engagement with businesses of all sizes and LEPs
reported engagement with higher education bodies, so it is not
just about the interface with local politicians.
The bigger geographical scale—beyond the council scale—which a
number of hon. Members have pointed to, gives LEPs a unique
vantage point to bring people together on lots of different
subjects. For example, one of the reasons why we use and resource
them is to develop local industrial strategies, which have flowed
into such things as innovation accelerators. Where innovation
accelerators exist, we hope that LEPs and the equivalent bodies
in the devolved areas will play a role in shaping what they
do.
There are lots of other such examples but today, in 2022, the
local growth landscape looks very different from when LEPs were
first launched. We have seen the introduction of combined
authority Mayors and a number of funds, such as the towns fund,
which involves local stakeholders potentially at a sub-local
authority level, bringing together lots of partners in the most
deprived half of towns. For example, through the local growth
fund and the forthcoming shared prosperity fund, we are
empowering those in lower-tier local government. Of course, LEPs
still play a crucial role in all the different things that they
are running and their wider role is also a crucial part of the
local growth story.
We are in the process of continuing on the journey of growth in
the number of mayoral combined authorities. In the White Paper,
we talked about nine new areas that have started talks with
Government, including a combined authority deal for York and
North Yorkshire and widening the geography of the north-east
deal, as well as deepening the deals that have been done for the
west midlands and Greater Manchester. Even as we do that, LEPs
will continue to have a crucial role outside the areas where
there are not electively accountable mayoral-type figures
operating across a strategic geography. As my hon. Friend the
Member for Hastings and Rye said, in many parts of the country
there will be no other body on that kind of scale with that kind
of strategic overview of the wider economy, straddling a number
of different local authorities.
Following the LEP review, which has concluded, we have clarity
about the end state that we want to get to and why we want to
continue to have LEPs: for that convening role, the private
sector expertise, and the ability to broker lots of different
local stakeholders and drive forward a wider strategic vision for
the area. That is why we have chosen to keep LEPs and why I pay
tribute to them today.
We appreciate the urgent need for certainty of the kind that
various hon. Members have raised. We are working to provide that
clarity to LEPs at the earliest opportunity. I am sure that
Members will appreciate some of the wider pressures that the
Government are facing, given the international situation. It has
been useful to have this debate today and to be able to express
my thanks and pay tribute to the work of LEPs. We will be in
touch with our colleagues in LEPs in the very near future.
One strength of LEPs is that the functional geography was
delivered by the LEPs themselves. It was left to people in their
own areas to determine what makes a sound economic unit. Does my
hon. Friend intend to retain that autonomy within the LEPs, so
that we keep that geography rather than relying on historical
local government boundaries?
Neil O'Brien
Yes. My hon. Friend has given me a good opportunity to recognise
that there is, I think—from my conversations with Coventry and
Warwickshire—a strong desire to continue to work together.
Without prejudging the outcome of anything, we have said that we
will respond to what local places want to do where LEPs straddle
areas, being partly in an MCA and partly outside. I am conscious,
from all my conversations with those involved in Coventry and
Warwickshire, that they have found it useful to work together. I
was very impressed by the list of projects that my hon. Friend
reeled off that they were leading in Coventry and Warwickshire.
We are absolutely conscious of what local people want—yes,
absolutely. Let me end by saying that we will continue to respond
to what local places want and how they want to work together to
drive forward their local economy and get more good jobs in all
these different parts of the country.
5.16pm
I thank the Minister for his fantastic response and the hon.
Member for Nottingham North () for his contribution, as well
as my hon. Friends the Members for Buckingham (), for Stroud () and for Northampton South
() for their excellent
contributions, and my hon. Friend the Member for Rugby () for his contribution through
interventions.
LEPs clearly have a role to play and are an asset to all the
constituencies represented today. They are not perfect, but they
have the ability to harness the power of businesses and they have
a commerciality about them that local authorities just do not
have. When it comes to decision making on the if, why, how, when
and what of spending money, it is really important that we have
the LEP voice in our regions. LEPs really do encourage business
growth. If we want to develop a culture of enterprise in this
country, LEPs really do play an important role in that. They
really do manage to convene partnerships, which is one of their
strengths. I was therefore delighted to hear the Minister’s
confirmation that LEPs will continue and will be funded and that
clarity will be provided soon.
Question put and agreed to.
Resolved,
That this House has considered the status of Local Enterprise
Partnerships.
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