- Reeves sets out the next phase of the government's growth
plan to build a stronger, more secure economy in an uncertain
world
- Government pursues three biggest
opportunities for growth: a closer UK‑EU relationship,
a step change in AI and unlocking growth in every UK
region and nation
- UK-EU alignment guided by National
Interest Principles so it boosts growth, cuts
business costs and strengthens resilience
- Step change on AI and regional growth - Growth Labs will
accelerate safe AI adoption, City Investment Funds will back
northern development, and Autumn Budget will set the direction
for further fiscal devolution
The Chancellor has set out how the government will build a
stronger and more secure economy in an uncertain world.
“Securonomics”, delivering stability, investment and reform
through an active and strategic state, is the right economic
plan in a more unstable world prone to shocks, the Chancellor
said in her Mais lecture.
She set out how the government will pursue
the three biggest opportunities for economic growth in
Britian: a closer and more stable economic relationship with the
EU, a step change in AI and frontier technology, and unlocking
growth in every region and nation of the UK.
At the heart of pursuing a closer and more stable economic
relationship with the EU will be the new National
Interest Principles to guide decisions
on aligning with the UK's biggest and closest
market.
The Chancellor said the principles will bring
discipline and clarity to choices that can cut the cost of doing
business, reduce friction at the border, and give firms the
certainty they need to invest and grow.
Working with the EU, alignment would be pursued where
it is clearly in the mutual interest — supporting
higher growth and better jobs, strengthening economic security
and resilience, and providing a stable basis for a closer
partnership that recognises the
deep and longstanding connections between our
economies.
The Chancellor also confirmed she will travel to Spain this
week for economic talks as part of the
government's drive to deepen partnerships with allies and open up
new opportunities for UK businesses.
EU relationship
The Chancellor set out how we would work with the EU to construct
a new economic partnership to deliver greater economic resilience
for both sides, a defence industrial base better able to
support us in repelling common threats and new opportunities for
both sides to export into one another's markets.
-
National
Interest Principles: the UK
will work closely with the EU and consider aligning
with rules where it boosts long‑term growth
and benefits consumers, supports investment and
better jobs, preserves or enhances UK security and resilience,
and provides stable, forward‑looking certainty for
business. This will not mean a return to free
movement.
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Shared burden‑reduction ambition: the EU
is targeting a reduction in administrative burdens of at least
25% for all businesses and 35% for SMEs, including cutting
recurring administrative costs by €37.5bn by the end of its
mandate. The UK has committed to cutting the administrative
burden of regulation by 25% by the end of
the Parliament – or £6bn savings per year for
businesses. The Government is exploring how the
UK and EU can work together more effectively on this
shared ambition.
-
Business Engagement Programme: The
Government will do more to engage businesses on EU regulatory
issues including upcoming EU regulation.
Unlocking growth in every region
The Chancellor set out how we will move away from a
model where growth is concentrated in a few places to one
that unlocks growth in every part of Britain. We are backing
Britain's cities, and ensuring towns don't lose out by connecting
them into those city-regions through better transport, housing
and skills. We are prioritising investment in the Industrial
Strategy's growth driving sectors where places already have
strengths, and devolving more power and long-term funding to
local leaders who know their areas best.
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City Investment Funds: £2.3bn of new
grant, loan, and patient capital funding to be
deployed by mayors in the largest city regions, focused in
the North and Midlands — backing Local Growth Plans, and
speeding up city‑centre regeneration and new homes by mixing
different types of capital to tackle viability gaps and attract
private investment.
-
Oxford‑Cambridge Growth Corridor: funding
doubled to £800m to remove barriers to development — speeding
up land assembly and enabling infrastructure, and consulting on
a Development Corporation for Greater Oxford to drive growth
alongside existing proposals for one in Greater
Cambridge.
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Land and value for taxpayers: government
will use new compulsory purchase powers to get stalled sites
moving, secure fair land deals where landowners hold to
unreasonable expectations, and reinvest the uplift in value
into new homes, infrastructure and
regeneration.
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Roadmap for fiscal devolution: the
Treasury will work with mayors and businesses to develop a
roadmap for future fiscal devolution at Autumn Budget, setting
out plans to give regional leaders control of how they allocate
a share of some national taxes that for too long have been
allocated by central government, looking at income tax
alongside other taxes.
-
IS-8 cluster partnerships
programme: backing five areas in the north,
including through £150m clusters investment from the
British Business Bank, supercharging growth
driving sectors where they already
excel – such as financial services in West
Yorkshire and life sciences and digital in
Liverpool - to grow cutting-edge firms and
good local jobs.
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Team Derby: £10m to back Team Derby — a
partnership led by the Mayor of the East Midlands bringing
together local, regional and central
government, industry and academia — to accelerate
growth in Derby by building on the region's key strengths.
Backing AI and innovation
The Chancellor set out action to back the technologies that will
define the next era of growth, and to speed
up adoption across the economy – with
the goal of making the UK the fastest adopter of AI in the
G7.
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Growth Labs: new cross‑economy
“sandboxing” powers to test innovations in live markets
with targeted, time‑limited regulatory changes and close
supervision. This could allow accelerated access to new
life-saving treatments by enabling controlled testing of
innovative medicines.
-
Sovereign AI Unit: £500m unit launching
16 April to help the best UK AI firms scale up and stay in the
UK — with direct investment, hands‑on support and
access to the compute they need.
-
Quantum: up to £2bn over the next decade
to turn UK quantum science into deployable technology —
including over £1bn in the next four years and up to £1bn to
buy commercial‑scale quantum computing capability in the UK
beyond 2030.
-
AI Adoption Summit: first summit in June
during London Tech Week, bringing together CEOs
and Industrial Strategy AI champions to accelerate
adoption.
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AI Economics Institute: Setting up a new
AI Economics Institute to work with the Future of Work Unit to
understand the impact of AI on jobs and productivity. This will
sit alongside further work to ensure workers are properly
empowered through the AI revolution.
This Government is delivering on its promise to work with
business to drive innovation and growth across the UK.
Today we are building on that with a focused programme of
engagement - from our AI Adoption Business Summit and targeted
engagement through DBT's EU Files Forum to our work with
businesses of all sizes to co-design the Northern Growth
Strategy. This partnership with industry will support practical
action on adoption, trade frictions and investment
nationwide.
Notes to editors
- New funding (£2.3bn for the City Investment Funds and
£100m loans package for Cambridge) will be accounted at
the Autumn Budget 2026. Other announcements in the speech are
funded within the Spending Review period from existing
departmental budgets, with further funding to
be allocated at future Spending Reviews.
- To ensure that government is achieving its objective of
providing our mayors with the long-term certainty that they need
to invest in the foundations of growth in a way that is practical
and responsible, the development of the roadmap on future fiscal
devolution will be guided by four key principles: empowerment,
accountability, sustainability and fairness. More detail will be
set out publicly in the Northern Growth Strategy document.