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Economic Development

Economy Minister Vaughan Gething on bringing back the WDA, Liberty Steel and the Shared Prosperity Fund

The Welsh Government minister said more needs to be done to boost business start-up levels in Wales

Economy Minister Vaughan Gething(Image: Matthew Horwood)

New Economy Minister Vaughan Gething said he would need to be convinced of the merits of creating something akin to a new Welsh Development Agency or outsourcing Welsh Government business support to the private sector.

He also said that the Welsh Government would be open to conversations about supporting Sanjeev Gupta’s business interests in Wales, despite a Serious Fraud Office probe into the steel magnate’s business empire and links to collapsed finance company Greensill.

A recent report from the OECD, while recognising the Welsh Government’s collaborative approach with local authorities and city regions through new corporate joint committees, said a new WDA-like body, with a regional dimension, could be established.

The WDA was abolished, with staff brought into the Welsh Government, in 2006. There are also those who believe Welsh Government business support should go one step further than a new at-arm’s-length WDA-type body by outsourcing it to the private sector – although private firms run some current programmes – with clear key performance indicators with financial penalties if they are not achieved.

Mr Gething said: “I am interested in the future of business support and the way that Business Wales [the business support brand of the Welsh Government] operates. It is not just the model it has, but the fact that a good chunk of its money comes from current European Union sources as well.

“So we really need to be clear about what is going to happen to that money and we may be forced to have another look at the way that business support operates, but I don’t think it would be helpful to move away from a single and well-recognised brand into having to do something different because it is forced upon us and then having an alternative competing set of brands introduced by different parts of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government.

“I would need to be persuaded that we would get better outcomes if we had a privatised model of business support. So obviously, what works and why and where is the evidence, but you couldn’t do that by having a successful in-house brand as we currently have.”

On improving start-up activity and entrepreneurship levels in the Welsh economy, he said: “We want to see that happen as we don’t have the rate of business start-ups and new businesses growing that we want to see. That is part of our challenge.