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PRIVACY
Economic Development

Birmingham 'could be bankrupt in 18 months'

MP Gisela Stuart warns city could go way of Detroit and calls for new system of leadership

Gisela Stuart (Image: Pic: Richard Maude)

Birmingham could be bankrupt in 18 months' time, an MP has warned.

Gisela Stuart (Lab Edgbaston) told the House of Commons the city could go the way of Detroit and warned Birmingham needed a new system of leadership in the form of a directly elected mayor, as well as direct access to funding, in order to secure its future.

City voters rejected the idea of a directly elected mayor in a referendum in 2012 but Mrs Stuart said holding the referendum was a mistake and a mayoral system should simply have been introduced.

Speaking in a debate attended by Local Government Secretary Eric Pickles, she said: "In 18 months' time, on the current trajectory, the city could go bankrupt. This is not just scary talk, it is the truth."

Birmingham City Council has cut spending by £375 million between 2011/12 to 2013/14 and has imposed cuts of £86 million for the current financial year.

But earlier this year, council leader Sir Albert Bore warned next year would be "the crunch point" when the city would be forced to cut spending further, even though any spending had already been reduced as much as possible

Speaking in March, he said: "In 2015/16, we are anticipating a further £207 million of cuts of which only £48 million is so far identified.

"In 2016/17, a further £81 million of cuts will be needed, of which only £28 million has been identified and in 2017/18 a further £72 million- almost all of which is still to be identified."