º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Economic Developmentopinion

Opinion: Improved rail connectivity is the missing piece of the puzzle that could help the Northern economy to grow

Stephen Cowperthwaite, from Avison Young º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, on Rachel Reeves' transport announcements and what must happen next

Stephen Cowperthwaite says the plan for a new Liverpool-Manchester railway is a 'deliverable vision' with wide backing (Image: Avison Young º£½ÇÊÓÆµ)

From the banks of the Mersey to the edge of the Pennines, the stretch of railway connecting Liverpool and Manchester is more than a historic route - it is a critical artery running through the economic heart of the North. Home to 5.4 million people and two Investment Zones, this corridor already plays a pivotal role in shaping the region’s future. But its potential is constrained by infrastructure that has struggled to keep pace with demand.

The world’s first inter-city railway opened here in 1830 with a bold ambition: to connect two of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s industrial giants and ignite economic progress. Now, nearly two centuries later, that same stretch demands a modern vision.

As Rachel Reeves announces a £113bn infrastructure investment package as part of the government’s spending review, the future connectivity of the North looks set to move forward. The North is ready to lead - but it cannot do so without the right foundations.

Improved rail connectivity is no longer a ‘nice to have’. It is the missing piece of the puzzle, and the catalyst that can unlock long-term, inclusive, and transformative growth.


The backbone of growth and innovation

The Liverpool-Manchester Railway is not just a transit route, but the backbone of a growing economic ecosystem. Recent government-backed Investment Zones in both cities highlight the critical importance of seamless movement between innovation hubs, residential neighbourhoods, talent pipelines and global gateways like ports and airports. A fast, reliable railway is what holds this complex web together.

Widening connections eastward to places like Leeds and Newcastle would expand labour markets, offer young people better access to education and opportunity, and enable collaboration between cities and sectors that drive innovation. Crucially, improved connectivity supports not just business efficiency, but social mobility. It opens doors to people who are currently locked out of opportunity by slow, unreliable travel options.

But the existing infrastructure is failing to meet this moment. Long journey times, inconsistent services and freight capacity issues are holding the region back - creating friction where there should be flow and blocking momentum where there should be progress. If left unaddressed, these barriers threaten to limit the impact of public and private investment already committed across the corridor.

Upgrading the corridor is more than a transport project. It represents a strategic pivot - positioning the North as a globally competitive, highly connected and investable region. With both metro mayors firmly backing this as a priority, the vision for a new high-speed line linking Liverpool and Manchester forms a central strand of the proposed Northern Arc, a series of interventions designed to enable cities to collaborate, not compete, and to drive a shared model of prosperity.