Cape Times

May puts Brexit cards on the table

Industrial strategy revealed

- Robert Hutton and Alex Morales

THE UK’s government will pick winning areas in the economy to champion as part of an industrial strategy aimed at boosting Britain’s productivi­ty as the country prepares to leave the EU.

Announcing the long-promised plan yesterday, Prime Minister Theresa May said she wanted to see “sector deals” to identify and address barriers to expansion in different industries. The government also aims to target areas where it thinks the UK could excel in the future, including biotechnol­ogy, artificial intelligen­ce, and mobile networking. Ministers will hold a cabinet meeting in north-west England to emphasise their desire to help parts of the country that have sometimes be left behind by industrial shifts.

New approach The strategy “will be underpinne­d by a new approach to government, not just stepping back, but stepping up to a new, active role that backs business and ensures more people in all corners of the country share in the benefits of its success,” May said.

May has placed the industrial strategy at the heart of her effort to define her government beyond Brexit. The plan, subject to a public consultati­on, aims to draw together policies on transport, education, telecommun­ications, energy and constructi­on to ensure businesses have the skills, links and access to supplies needed to expand and diversify.

The strategy is “about the economy of the future, it’s about ensuring that business can grow and is encouraged to grow in the UK,” May said on Thursday in a television interview. “It’s also about ensuring that the benefits of prosperity are available across the whole country, we see that economic growth and prosperity for everyone.”

The prime minister also aims to boost teaching of those subjects in universiti­es

Among areas targeted for government help is technical education. May will announce £170 million (R2.85 billion) for new institutes, teaching science, technology, engineerin­g and maths, that will provide high school graduates with the skills demanded by local employers. May also aims to boost teaching of those subjects in universiti­es, as well as maths in high schools.

“We know we’re going to have to compete and have the chance to compete with countries around the world,” business secretary Greg Clark said yesterday in a BBC television interview. “It’s an increasing­ly competitiv­e world. You get no quarter if you’re not productive. We’re less productive than even our neighbours – France and Germany – for example, and that’s something we need to address.”

May’s focus on technical education is likely to please businesses. A survey released on Saturday of 800 members of the Institute of Directors, a business lobbying group, found that their top policy priority is a long-term skills strategy, with three-quarters of companies saying it’s “very important.” Infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts and better broadband were their second and third choices.

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