How Labour can boost British investment - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
英国工党

How Labour can boost British investment

Without a sustained increase in capital spending, higher growth will remain distant

Rachel Reeves, left, with deputy prime minister Angela Rayner on Monday. In her speech, the new chancellor outlined efforts to overhaul the country’s gummed-up planning system

In her first major speech as Britain’s chancellor of the exchequer, Rachel Reeves underscored the new government’s dogged focus on delivering long-term economic growth, declaring it a “national mission”. With sluggish productivity for well over a decade, promises to drive growth are, however, much less important than the plan to deliver it. Labour’s growth strategy is still nascent, though its manifesto and early announcements give a flavour of its plan. One essential element is to unlock investment. Without a sustained increase in both public and private capital expenditure, Labour’s national mission will remain a pipe dream.

The UK has languished at the bottom of the G7 table for total investment for 24 of the past 30 years. Investment is needed to revamp roads, rail and energy infrastructure, and drive innovation. This boosts productivity growth and wages. Britain’s investment problem is multi-faceted, and no single lever can unleash it. But three catalysts will give Labour a strong chance of success: stabilising the policy environment, creating investment opportunities, and mobilising money.

To some extent, the government is already delivering on the first. “Stability” was central to its campaign messaging, and its large majority also makes Britain look more appealing to investors while political uncertainty continues in peer nations. Quick appointments and early policy announcements give investors confidence.

Many investors still need clarity, though, on other aspects of Labour’s agenda before making commitments. One is how it plans to improve relations with the EU. A second is how newly planned bodies — including a Regulatory Innovation Office, which aims to speed up regulatory decisions — will operate in practice. Investors are also seeking assurances on the government’s plans for capital gains tax, which some fear it will raise.

Alongside stability, Britain needs to open up investment opportunities. The government has made a promising start here. On Monday, Reeves outlined efforts to overhaul the country’s gummed-up planning system. This included commendable plans to elevate the importance of economic benefits in assessing development plans, provide support for more planning officers and a review of the National Planning Policy Framework. If this helps to simplify the system, it would remove a significant barrier to cross-industry investment. Another hurdle is skills shortages, which require the government to design a more flexible training system.

Finally, to turbocharge investment, the government must do a better job of channelling financial resources. Reeves used her speech to warn of the dire state of public finances, which only reinforces the importance of leveraging private financing sources for investment.

A £7.3bn National Wealth Fund, which will provide cornerstone funding to support private sector investment, is encouraging. The fund’s task force on Tuesday suggested extending investments into “wider sectors”, beyond the initial focus on decarbonisation, and to entrench operational independence from the government. Provided this does not result in small-scale scattergun investments, this sounds sensible. The government must simultaneously pursue efforts to liberate the country’s vast pension savings for capital investment. A further source of funding is foreign investment. Here, a “concierge service” could help prospective investors navigate regulatory issues and boost the country’s appeal.

To overturn decades of under-investment, the government will have to spin many plates. It has got off to a decent start. But if it is to fund public service renewal from economic growth, delivering on all aspects of the investment agenda will be crucial.

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

特朗普因新关税计划面临法律挑战

在最高法院裁定先前关税非法后,美国总统转而援引一些鲜为人知的法律。

整顿还是圈地?印尼领导人瞄准资源公司

印尼总统普拉博沃•苏比延多誓言将对违反环境法规的资源企业采取强硬措施。

伊朗战争威胁海湾资金的全球流动

海合会六个成员国数十年来已集体成长为全球金融领域最具影响力的力量之一,投资足迹遍及全球。世界对中东资本的依赖程度比许多人意识到的更深。

一周展望:投资者在押注滞胀吗?

随着全球债市抛售加剧,一种新的忧虑正在占据上风:滞胀。

特朗普将伊朗战争推向新的升级阶段

在伊朗发动一连串针锋相对式打击之后,美国总统发出48小时最后通牒,要求开放霍尔木兹海峡。

高技能劳动者正在训练AI——这要付出代价

步入这一全新劳动力市场的学生应谨慎规划对外分享的内容,重新思考竞争,并考虑集体谈判。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×