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Johnson vows ‘new deal’ to rebuild post-virus UK

Us$6.2bil infrastruc­ture developmen­t to be accelerate­d

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LONDON: Boris Johnson will commit to spending on infrastruc­ture to rebuild the coronaviru­s-ravaged UK economy in a major policy speech and say that balancing the books must wait until recovery is secure.

Reprising spending pledges he made before December’s general election, the prime minister will announce the accelerati­on of £5bil (Us$6.2bil) of investment in roads, schools and hospitals and promise to publish a strategy for further capital spending in the fall.

“We will build build build. Build back better, build back greener, build back faster and to do that at the pace that this moment requires,” Johnson will say, according to extracts of the speech released by his office.

What is needed is “a new deal” and “a government that is powerful and determined and that puts its arms around people at a time of crisis,” he will say.

Johnson won a commanding 80-seat Parliament­ary majority by promising to “level-up” left behind parts of the UK with spending on infrastruc­ture and skills, but his plans were blown off course as ministers battled the pandemic, which has killed 43,575 people and plunged the economy into recession.

As lockdown restrictio­ns are lifted, he is seeking to regain the initiative and deliver on his pledges as the centerpiec­e of his rebuilding plans.

The prime minister, who has said he will not repeat the austerity policies his party imposed after the 2008 financial crisis, will compare his programme to President Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s “new deal,” which used government spending to help the United States out of the Great Depression in the 1930s.

And he’s prepared to increase borrowing to make it happen. In a briefing note about the speech, Johnson’s office said decisions over increasing taxes or cutting services to pay for the debt will have to wait.

“While in the long-term the government must set a path to balance the books, the prime minister is clear that we will not do so at the expense of investing now in the productive potential of the economy, or at the expense of the resilience of the UK’S public services,” it said.

With debt higher than GDP for the first time since 1963, Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak will “provide an update” on the economy next week. The announceme­nt angered the opposition Labour Party, which wants a full redrawing of the budget to focus on employment.

“Unemployme­nt has climbed to its highest level in a generation, and our country is suffering the worst economic hit of all industrial­ized nations,” Anneliese Dodds, Labour’s economy spokeswoma­n said in a statement.

“Instead of the Back-to-work Budget our country needs focusing on one thing – jobs, jobs, jobs – the Chancellor will only be providing an ‘update’ on the economy.”

The £5bil Johnson will allocate to hospital maintenanc­e, school repairs and road improvemen­ts is not new money and is a fraction of the infrastruc­ture spending announced in March.

Then, Sunak committed to increase total infrastruc­ture spending across the next five years by £100bil to a total of £600bil. While much of that investment was designed to help reduce the UK’S long standing regional inequaliti­es in growth and productivi­ty, there are questions over whether such spending is the best way to stimulate the economy’s recovery from coronaviru­s.

“Infrastruc­ture spending can get the biggest bang for the buck over the longer term, if projects are chosen carefully and boost productivi­ty, but it is hard to find a large number of worthwhile shovel-ready projects that can boost demand quickly in the short term,” Julian Jessop, economics fellow at the IEA, said in an email Monday.

“There is also a risk that the government simply takes jobs away from other priority areas, such as house building.”

A delayed National Infrastruc­ture Strategy, which was originally scheduled for March, will be published in the fall, Johnson’s office said. The document will outline plans for “core” services including roads, energy networks, rail, flood defenses and waste.

The economic impact of restrictio­ns to control the virus has been unpreceden­ted, shrinking the economy by 20% in April alone and leaving officials fretting over the long-term scarring effects of what could be the deepest recession in more than 300 years.

While the government’s furloughin­g plan has ensured the UK has so far avoided a wave of unemployme­nt, data suggest the labor market is also weakening, and opposition parties have warned joblessnes­s could soar to levels not seen since the 1980s unless support is extended beyond its scheduled end in October.

There was a reminder Monday that the UK’S path out of the crisis won’t necessaril­y be smooth when Leicester, a city in the English midlands, reimposed recently eased lockdown restrictio­ns and closed schools amd non-essential shops after a spike in cases.

The British Chambers of Commerce welcomed Johnson’s infrastruc­ture spending plans, though said he will need to move fast to achieve his goals.

“The infrastruc­ture delivery plans announced by the prime minister are welcome, but they must take shape on the ground swiftly to give a real confidence boost,” BCC Director General Adam Marshall said in a statement.

“In his first inaugural speech, Franklin Delano Roosevelt said, ‘We must act, and act quickly.’ The same holds true in Britain today.”

“We will build build build. Build back better, build back greener, build back faster and to do that at the pace that this moment requires.” Boris Johnson

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