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Economic Development

Our cities and businesses need more: North West businesses react to Rachel Reeves’ Budget

Chamber says announcements a sign of ‘reactive crisis management’ – but others welcome regional drive

Rachel Reeves, poses with the red Budget Box as she leaves 11 Downing Street to present the government's annual budget to Parliament(Image: Getty Images)

North West business leaders say the region’s cities and businesses still need more from the Government after Rachel Reeves’ long-trailed Budget statement.

The Chancellor raised taxes by £26 billion as she faced forecasts of weaker economic growth, more inflation, and growing unemployment. She also announced the abolition of the two-child benefit cap to ease child poverty, and said she would build herself a bigger buffer against her borrowing rules.

The reaction locally has been mixed, with business leaders at a Liverpool Chamber event attended by BusinessLive saying they were relieved at the lack of surprises but were still uncertain where growth might come from.

Subrahmaniam Krishnan-Harihara, deputy director of research at Greater Manchester Chamber of Commerce, said: “The run up to the Budget was pessimistic because of the expected and now confirmed OBR downgrades to º£½ÇÊÓÆµ economic growth and productivity – which widens the fiscal “black hole” – and chaotic because of the policy “kite flying” and U-turns on some anticipated measures, such as the proposed increase in income tax rates. The result is a Budget that fundamentally fails to deliver what the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ economy needs.


“To start off, the arithmetic does not appear to work. The announced measures raise approximately £26 billion. Simultaneously, spending is expected to increase significantly.

“For example, the Government have taken up direct funding of special needs education from 2028-29 costing up to £6.3 billion annually, while spending on sickness related benefits will be up to £20 billion annually by the end of the decade. Indeed, the OBR has warned that even the increased headroom that the Chancellor expects is still small compared with the uncertain economic forecasts and the smorgasbord approach to raising additional tax revenues.

“Therefore, there is concern that the gap the Chancellor needs to fill may not be filled. That means the Chancellor is counting on very optimistic levels of economic growth or, perhaps, holding back on larger measures for the coming years. Otherwise, the gap remains unfilled.