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Economic Development

Business leaders slam º£½ÇÊÓÆµ road and rail network, calling on politicians to 'make good' on infrastructure promises

Leaders have demanded 'real action' following a 'barrage of promises' in each of the major parties' General Election manifestos

Just over a third of firms feel the road network is meeting their needs when reaching customers, suppliers and employees(Image: Dominic Salter)

Businesses across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ say the country's road and rail network isn't meeting their needs, and ahead of next month's General Election have demanded parties to "make good" on their infrastructure promises.

A survey by the British Chambers of Commerce (BCC) of 1,200 business leaders found that just over a third of firms feel the road network is meeting their needs when reaching customers, suppliers and employees - a fall from 47% in 2018.

Results of the '2020 and beyond, business priorities for the next º£½ÇÊÓÆµ government' were revealed today, and also said 60% experienced delays resulting in increased travel costs, loss of business, or client dissatisfaction across a one-month period.

Satisfaction with the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ rail network is even lower - less than a quarter said it was meeting their needs, compared to 34% last year.

The Chamber is now calling on the next º£½ÇÊÓÆµ government to deliver promised investment in road and rail schemes, and to give businesses a greater voice for businesses in local decision making.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson, Liberal Democrat leader Jo Swinson, First Minister of Scotland Nicola Sturgeon and Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, have made a 'barrage of promises'(Image: PA)

According to the research, the majority of businesses do not feel that their views are taken into account when decisions are made about infrastructure. Just one in ten feel their views are either somewhat or very much taken into account in national decisions, with a little over a quarter saying their views are considered at the local level.

BCC co-executive director, Claire Walker, said: “This election has generated a barrage of promises on infrastructure spending, but unless we see real action in the early months of the new parliament, our hard-pressed firms will struggle to deliver the economic resurgence we desperately need.

"Upgrading our road and rail capacity would send a vital signal that businesses are finally being heard, would kick-start business investment across the country and will pay dividends long into the future.