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PRIVACY
Economic Development

CBI boss Tony Danker says levelling up needs to be private sector led

He said calls for the economy to no longer be measured by GDP due to climate change was often the argument of the middle class

Tony Danker

The private sector has to lead on the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government’s levelling up agenda by driving the scaling up of industry clusters identified as having global potential, including the compound semi-conductor initiative in South Wales, says director-general of the CBI Tony Danker.

On a visit to Wales, Mr Danker said he would be supportive of a Welsh Government seeking new powers to provide more favourable investment deduction and tax credits as a means of attracting inward investment and boosting skills and clusters, rather than any devolving of corporation taxes.

On the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government levelling up agenda, he said the last year had identified a set of priorities to level up the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ economy, through its Seize the Moment agenda, including driving the international competitiveness of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s nations and regions over the next decade.

He said: “Our main prescription for that (levelling up) has been a private sector response rather than a government one. What the levelling up White Paper tries to do is essentially rewire the way central government spends money to level up the allocation of funds. I think that is necessary, but not sufficient.

What you need is high value sectors with high value firms, jobs and wages in every part of the country. Therefore, the private sector's levelling up strategy is what really interests us. And our major thinking has been around cluster development and what is likely to drive, in places like Wales, more high quality jobs, wages and skills. It is distinct local competitive advantage, combined with private sector commitment to invest, and in turn partnerships with institutions like universities and colleges. And here in Wales we are excited about the compound semi-conductor cluster, which I feel has real potential.”

He added: “What we want to see happen is government policy far more orientated towards the development of private sector cluster success, because everything in government white papers and everything that the Welsh Government might do, doesn’t really change the economic prosperity of people’s lives unless it engages the private sector in driving up value added.

“So, what has never really been done is that you go to areas where there is clear potential and already anchor institutions and the private sector investing to ask them, ‘what do you need for this thing to scale?’ And if we want the Welsh semi-conductor cluster to really be the best in the world you ask what it would take for us (private sector) to put in real money and build one clear economic success with secondary support service sectors around it, which in turn has a trickle down effect on the economy. And I think that is what you will start to see once you do serious private sector driven cluster development.”

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