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PRIVACY
Opinion

We need a Welsh Government that champions business and growing the economy

Government must get out of its own way as planning delays, slow procurement and layers of grant paperwork has become one of the biggest barriers to doing business in Wales.

Welsh voters will go the polls next May.(Image: Copyright Unknown)

Next May Wales will go to the polls to decide who governs the nation for the next five years. For the Welsh Government, that means six months to prove that it actually has an economic plan to rebuild confidence, attract investment and deliver growth.

For too long, economic strategy in Wales has been light on delivery and the private sector has grown tired of a system that seems designed to manage decline rather than inspire renewal. This is despite having world-class companies, innovative entrepreneurs and talented workers to revive our economic fortunes.

More relevantly, given that the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government has just given the Welsh government £547m over the next three years to grow the economy, how should that funding be invested?


First of all, confidence needs to be rebuilt through a clear national growth and investment plan, with businesses and investors knowing exactly where Wales is going. Instead of a patchwork of disconnected programmes, we need a single roadmap setting out measurable targets for new businesses, jobs, exports and private investment and a vision has been missing for way too long.

It should focus on sectors where Wales already has a competitive edge - advanced manufacturing, green energy, creative industries, fintech, food and drink, life sciences, and tourism - and be backed by a £250m co-investment fund to scale up firms that are ready to grow.

Alongside this, a public “investment atlas” should highlight every major opportunity in the country, from tidal power to tech clusters, so that investors see Wales as a coherent proposition rather than a collection of small unconnected projects.

And we need to be far more confident about selling Wales to the world, promoting our creativity, innovation and sustainability through a modern international campaign that positions the country as forward-looking and ambitious.

To achieve this, entrepreneurship must become a national mission rather than an afterthought as Wales still trails the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ average in new business creation and yet nothing will transform any economy faster than a surge in start-ups and scale-ups.