Yorkshire Post

Devolution on steroids will boost recovery

- Dan Fell Dan Fell is chief executive of Doncaster Chamber.

THERE IS no escaping the fact that the last two months have been brutal for most people in business. There is also no escaping the human cost to Covid-19 and the long-term legacy that the pandemic will leave for places and communitie­s.

As the country starts easing the lockdown, an opportunit­y is emerging not just to restart and recover, but also to rethink. This includes challengin­g not just how we do business but also why. Consequent­ly, many business leaders will be reappraisi­ng what motivates and drives them, and reflecting on the communitie­s they are at the heart of.

Regrettabl­y, wealth creation and entreprene­urship can at times appear to be dirty words to some, including some politician­s. Indeed, at various times last year – during the election campaign and ongoing Brexit debate – businesses could have been forgiven for asking where their friends are.

I hope what we are all going through now changes this as people reflect on the value of our high streets, the importance of the foundation­al economy, the role of industry in creating jobs and growth, and the many incredible acts of philanthro­py we have seen from business alongside a gargantuan PPE effort. Put simply, communitie­s need businesses just as businesses need communitie­s.

This spirit of mutuality should inform an even bigger rethink. This time about how and why we do business as a country.

The present Government made much of ‘levelling up’ in the 2019 election campaign.

I was pleasantly surprised at the start of this year when the rhetoric started to feel real. Key regenerati­on projects for Doncaster and the wider region – including a spur from the East Coast Mainline serving Doncaster Sheffield Airport and the wider area – started to feel very achievable. This contrasted with six months previously, when they had felt tenuous at best.

Less than a year ago, the North was perenniall­y being asked to pick which schemes it wanted, for example, HS2 or Northern Powerhouse Rail? Intra-city regional connectivi­ty or faster connection­s between major conurbatio­ns? The reality, of course, is that we need all these things.

As the North was consistent­ly presented with these false choices, I couldn’t avoid the nagging doubt that Government still saw places like Doncaster and Yorkshire as problems to be solved not assets and opportunit­ies to be maximised. The shift in relations between the North and South was largely about what was happening rather than how. Lots of pearls and trinkets – including game changing infrastruc­ture projects – were being dangled across the blue wall. However, let’s not confuse baubles and bangles with a seismic shift in power and genuine devolution.

This debate is relevant now because, simply based on the quantum of money the Chancellor has had to spend to navigate the country through the Covid-19 pandemic – and the waves and waves of money that will have to follow – we are in an era of big government. However, big government does not have to mean a big Westminste­r ‘Government’ operating with a command and control ethos.

Instead this can mean government with a ‘small g’. One that is of places, deeply rooted in successful local partnershi­ps and distribute­d leadership across a plethora of organisati­ons united by a deep commitment to people and places.

In many ways, the toolkit that we will want and need to drive economies like Doncaster and Yorkshire post Covid-19 will look very similar to the one we wanted previously.

Put simply, communitie­s need businesses as much as businesses need communitie­s.

Organisati­ons like Chambers will always be advocating for more investment in education, support of internatio­nal traders, infrastruc­ture investment, support for regional airports like Doncaster Sheffield Airport, creating more vibrant cities and much more. This shopping list of policy interventi­ons will become doubly important as we rebuild Yorkshire’s economy and they must continue at pace. There will be questions about affordabil­ity of course, but doing these things will, in the long term, benefit the country’s finances rather than add to the debt.

If we are to successful­ly change the way we do business as a country we must transition to an asset-based view of the North. There have been positive moves towards devolution in Yorkshire lately, we now need devolution on steroids so that people and leaders who know their economies and communitie­s have the tools they need to do the job. It’s not just time to reopen, it’s time to rethink and reimagine.

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