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Economic Development

Government start-ups scheme centred on London and South East, Labour says

Businesses in the North and Midlands received only a fifth of the support given by the Future Fund to firms in London and the South East

Manchester Town Hall and the city skyline(Image: Manchester Evening News)

London and the South East have received five times more Government funding for start-ups than the North and Midlands, according to analysis by Labour.

Businesses in the South East and London in total received more than £700 million in funding, while those in the North, Yorkshire and Midlands received £140 million, data shows.

Meanwhile, the average award for a start-up in the North East, North West, West Midlands and Yorkshire was lower than that for a business in London or the South East.

Shadow business secretary Ed Miliband accused the Government of “reinforcing economic imbalances in our country” in the start-up funding.

Just over two-thirds of applications for the Future Fund – launched to help protect the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s innovation sector during the coronavirus crisis – were from London and the South East.

Labour looked at funding allocations for successful applicants since the scheme launched in April of last year up until December 17, when the most recent data was released.

The Future Fund programme, aiming to support businesses that are normally reliant on equity investment, closed to new applicants on January 31 this year.

The average award for businesses in London was £1,058,422, while in the North East it was £892,857, according to Labour’s analysis of Future Fund data.