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Economic Development

West Midlands must be ambitious in post-lockdown aims says mayor

Andy Street makes no apology for asking the Government to hand the region £3.2bn to boost its economic recovery in the wake of the coronavirus crisis

The 2022 Commonwealth Games will be a key project for creating local jobs as part of the new £3.2bn blueprint

The West Midlands Mayor has said the region must be ambitious in its aims for a post-coronavirus recovery as he joined leaders to showcase a new economic blueprint.

Andy Street said he made no apologies for thinking big as the West Midlands Combined Authority (WMCA) and its partners prepare to do battle with Westminster in a bid to secure £3.2 billion in new funding.

The new masterplan, called 'Kickstarting the West Midlands Economy: Our Investment Case to Government', was published just hours before Prime Minister Boris Johnson outlined the latest raft of measures yesterday aimed at easing the coronavirus lockdown and boosting the hospitality industry.

In it, business and political leaders in the West Midlands outline a whole host of projects they will be seeking funding for including a £614 million investment package to create green manufacturing jobs and £60 million for the Birmingham Life Sciences Park in Selly Oak.

Speaking to journalists at an online briefing about the new report, Mr Street said the £3.2 billion was a "big ask" but it was also an appropriate figure to target for the region.

"I am not going to apologise for that - it would be far worse to come on here and not be ambitious for our region," he said.

"There has been real unity that we must be ambitious. If you put the numbers in context, the regional economy is worth around £105 billion every year and this is £3 billion, a lot of which is investment rather than revenue spend over a three-year period.