Daily Mail

Global bosses back Britain

Resilient UK a top destinatio­n for investment . . . but outlook precarious for world economy

- From John-Paul Ford Rojas in Davos

BrEXIT Britain is resilient and remains one of the world’s most important investment destinatio­ns, a global poll of business leaders has found.

The PwC survey showed the uK is the most strategica­lly important country for uS chief executives and is also becoming an increasing­ly key location for Chinese firms.

The audit giant’s findings, published at the World Economic Forum in davos, undermine repeated claims that Britain’s departure from the European union has diminished its place in the world.

and they come as a separate poll of company chief economists, published by the organisers of the summit, highlighte­d the ‘precarious nature of the current economic environmen­t’ for the world and an outlook ‘fraught with uncertaint­y’.

The poll found that 56pc expect the global economy to weaken this year as firms grapple with tough borrowing conditions, global tensions and the rise of aI.

The PwC survey, however, follows official figures last week showing a bounce-back in GdP in november, allaying fears of a recession.

PwC’s uK boss Kevin Ellis said they showed how attractive Britain remains around the world even as some in the uK take a ‘hair-shirted’ negative view of their own country.

The survey of 4,702 chief executives in 105 countries, including 135 in the uK, revealed Britain remained the number one country for chief executives from the uS – the world’s biggest economy – who are looking to invest.

and it has shot up the rankings for bosses in China, the world’s second biggest economy – from 16th to sixth – possibly because of Britain’s embrace of cutting edge technology such as aI.

However, it has slipped back in the rankings when looking at all global chief executives – falling to fourth behind Germany after the two countries were joint third last year.

The uS and China are the two most important investment destinatio­ns for global chief executives. Ellis said: ‘The uK’s standing on the world stage has proved pretty resilient, particular­ly among the biggest powers and global investors. There’s no doubt it remains an attractive place to live, work and invest. But we can’t be complacent. as a country, we’re probably more hair-shirted about ourselves than the rest of the world is about us.

you do feel it when you travel around the world, we are very attractive and everyone’s very interested in us.’

The PwC survey also revealed that uK chief executives are much more bullish than bosses from other countries about the world economy, with 61pc of British bosses expecting it to improve compared with 38pc globally.

uK chief executives were less confident about their own country, however, with only 39pc expecting it to improve. However, that was sharply up on last year when – in the shadow of Liz Truss’s disastrous mini-Budget in September 2022 – just 9pc voiced optimism.

and the figures also reveal that 48pc of British bosses plan to increase their workforce by 5pc or more this year, well ahead of French, German and uS business leaders.

 ?? ?? Strategic: Davos is hosting the WEF annual meeting this week
Strategic: Davos is hosting the WEF annual meeting this week

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