Daily Mail

Time for Great British reboot

- Ruth Sunderland BUSINESS EDITOR

WHILE Westminste­r was convulsed by the confidence vote in the Prime Minister, a group of business leaders were served a plate of chicken masala 212 miles away at Keighley Asian Women and Children’s Centre.

The food was cooked by women hoping to set up a social enterprise delivering lunchtime curries to nearby firms.

One told how Naz Kazmi, the centre’s chief executive, had helped her regain selfconfid­ence after an abusive marriage. Rather than being grim, it was inspiring. Prince Charles’s Business in the Community network, which organised the visit to Keighley and Bradford, is celebratin­g its 40th anniversar­y, and has been engaged in what is now called levelling up all that time.

In Keighley, it is clear that the Government’s flagship policy is sorely needed – and how many people’s lives could be transforme­d. Boris Johnson’s Government has shown enthusiasm for reducing regional inequaliti­es, seasoned with a dollop of selfintere­st in hanging on to Red Wall voters.

It is an enormously difficult task. Government­s as far back as Harold Wilson’s have tried and failed. Perhaps the difference this time is that we are moving into a digital economy that can in theory thrive anywhere, so the environmen­t might finally be more conducive.

But the gap between London and elsewhere is in reality a gulf. The Institute for fiscal Studies (IfS) says Preston, the most productive city in the North West, lags behind London by 30pc. Sunderland, the top performer in the North East, trails by 20pc.

Unlike previous downturns, employment is plentiful around the country – but many of the jobs are low skilled and low paid.

Data from the Office for National Statistics suggest the divide between London and the rest of the country is widening, with output in the capital growing by 1.2pc in the first quarter of this year, surpassing all the other regions.

Existing disparitie­s will be made worse by the cost-of-living crisis, which will hit poorer communitie­s hardest.

When the Government’s levelling-up White Paper came out in february, the IfS warned its ambitions were unlikely to be achieved even with large resources and ‘the best politics’, neither of which are in evidence.

Last week, the cross-party Commons public accounts committee found support from the Government’s £4.8bn Levelling-Up fund had been awarded ‘on the basis of unrealisti­c claims’ at the expense of more solid propositio­ns. This is not acceptable. far too much is at stake, and far too many people will be deprived of life chances they deserve. In Bradford and Keighley, as in other towns, there is no shortage of energy, ideas or enterprise. But there is frustratio­n with needless obstacles and box-ticking.

There is frustratio­n, too, at the state of the nation’s transport system. While the capital luxuriates in the new Elizabeth Line, Bradford has the worst rail connection­s of any major conurbatio­n. The situation has not been helped by the major scaling back of Northern Powerhouse Rail or the dropping of the HS2 Leeds leg.

In less well- off communitie­s with poor public transport where a car is essential to get to work, £100 to fill a tank is ruinous.

Levelling up is about better opportunit­ies for coming generation­s. Young lives are transforme­d by good schools, which also benefit local employers looking for recruits.

firms should be encouraged to follow the example of JCB, which supports its own academy school in Staffordsh­ire, and businessma­n Christophe­r Nieper, who has taken over a failing Derbyshire comprehens­ive.

People are proud of their home towns, despite all the problems. That can be turned into a powerful force to reboot Britain.

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