Yorkshire Post

BUDGET MUST ADDRESS FUNDING EMERGENCIE­S

- Rachel Reeves ■ Rachel Reeves is Labour MP for Leeds West and chair of Parliament’s Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy Committee.

THE MEDICAL emergency and economic threat posed by the coronaviru­s outbreak mean next week’s Budget is of critical importance. It is a moment to be brave, not cautious.

It’s a big test for Richmond MP Rishi Sunak. He will have been Chancellor for less than a month when he delivers his first Budget since taking over from Sajid Javid, who quit after refusing to be bullied by the PM and his advisers.

However, despite lacking experience and being widely unknown, the new Chancellor must not shirk the vital decisions to tackle the underlying challenges we face from underinves­tment and a lack of political ambition.

Of course, there needs to be help in the Budget to tackle the health, economic and social impacts of what increasing­ly looks like a pandemic, starting with emergency funding for our NHS and care system.

The newly-appointed Chancellor of the Exchequer must offer support for the worst-hit businesses if they see big falls in customers or an inability to operate because of lack of staff or components that are shipped in from affected countries.

Support is also needed for workers who do not qualify for statutory sick pay such as those on zero-hours contracts and the self-employed – a growing number given Tory austerity and the failure to tackle employers who exploit their workers.

With warnings that 20 per cent of the workforce could be off sick at the peak, no one should be punished financiall­y for doing the right thing and staying at home and self-isolating.

The Prime Minister said as much this week, but a five-week wait for Universal Credit if you can’t work is not the same as providing support.

And workers were already facing a tough time before the virus struck.

I outlined the problems in a pamphlet called Everyday Work I published last month with the support of the GMB union, based on interviews with workers from social care, to steel, to bar work.

It was clear to me from those conversati­ons that while most people enjoyed their jobs, there is growing insecurity coupled with a feeling that they are under-appreciate­d, suffering from years of deteriorat­ing pay and conditions without being listened to by their employers.

The Chancellor needs an agenda for improving pay and working conditions, particular­ly for those in parts of the North which are still dealing with the legacy of deindustri­alisation.

This mustn’t be just a holding Budget. After years of political paralysis there can be no more excuses for delaying long-overdue efforts to boost growth and wages. And we don’t need more reviews or consultati­ons. We need to start investing in our crippled infrastruc­ture and strained public services now.

On that theme, it is crucial the Chancellor delivers the missing £23m needed to protect Leeds from future flooding. As my colleagues Holly Lynch, Rachael Maskell and Dan Jarvis – and Tory Craig Whittaker – powerfully put it in Parliament this week, there must also be support for other badly flood-hit Yorkshire towns and cities, including Calderdale, York and Doncaster.

Last month, I was on Harden Moor in the hills above Leeds and Bradford to see the work being done to plant trees and build “leaky dams” to slow the flow of water into the River Aire and cut the risk of flooding. As I stood there in the snow, it was a reminder of the power of nature and the impact the climate emergency is having on us all.

Beyond flood defences, our creaking rail services need far greater investment and the Budget presents a golden opportunit­y to do that.

Following the collapse of Flybe this week, there has never been a more important time to focus on improving the connection­s between regions. The airline played a key role in regional connectivi­ty and I hope other carriers will step in quickly to fill routes not served by train. But most of all we need a frequent, fast and reliable rail network to link up all the nations and regions of the United Kingdom.

Nationally, we need to see a commitment, backed up with funds, from the Government on Northern Powerhouse Rail and HS2 beyond Birmingham to allow us to unlock the full potential of our region. And please, let’s make sure that when we invest in big projects we use British steel and build the trains here, creating jobs and apprentice­ships and taking advantage of our great manufactur­ing heritage.

The economic cost of delaying investment will be far higher than spending money now, especially given the low rates at which the Government can borrow money and the urgent need for improvemen­ts.

Despite Boris Johnson’s repetition of his “levelling up” slogan, and rhetoric about tackling the long-standing regional inequaliti­es, we have yet to see any real evidence of that happening.

Yorkshire and the North have so much to offer. It is time the Chancellor and the PM followed the example set by Channel 4 who are coming to Leeds. There is no reason why the House of Lords could not be relocated to Yorkshire and why not the Treasury too? It would improve policy-making and bring investment too.

We have heard a lot of talk about levelling up. On Wednesday we will find out just how much – or how little – the Chancellor is prepared to do when it comes to tackling the North-South divide and powering the economy of the whole United Kingdom.

There can be no more excuses for delaying long-overdue efforts to boost growth and wages.

 ?? PICTURE: STEFAN ROUSSEAU/PA ?? GOLDEN OPPORTUNIT­Y: Chancellor Rishi Sunak must use his Budget to deal with coronaviru­s issues, flood-hit Yorkshire towns and investment in the North of England.
PICTURE: STEFAN ROUSSEAU/PA GOLDEN OPPORTUNIT­Y: Chancellor Rishi Sunak must use his Budget to deal with coronaviru­s issues, flood-hit Yorkshire towns and investment in the North of England.
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