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Scheme for high-growth companies gives 73% of funding to firms in London and the South

Companies in the North get just 11% of the funding from the Future Fund, with lending even lower in the Midlands and the devolved nations

Part of the Newcastle City Centre skyline(Image: Newcastle Journal)

A Government scheme set up to ensure some of the country’s most exciting companies could continue to grow during lockdown gave almost three-quarters of its funding to companies in London and the South.

The Future Fund was established last year to ensure that start-up and scale-up companies whose progress would otherwise have been hit by the coronavirus pandemic were still able to access funding for growth.

The fund - which was seen as key to ensuring that high growth companies were able to contribute to the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s economic recovery - was recently wound up, with the British Business Bank revealing that 59% of funding went to companies in London, followed by 14% in the rest of the South.

By contrast the North - which accounts for around 22% of the population of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ - received 11% of the funding available.

The low funding for companies in the North was at least better than that given to Midlands firms (4%) and the combined devolved nations of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, which received just 3% between them.

The British Business Bank said that the lending figures were “in line with the wider market trends for equity investments” but the huge amount of funding going to firms in London has been questioned in light of the Government’s ‘levelling up’ agenda.

Newcastle Central MP and Shadow Business Minister Chi Onwurah said: “Time and time again the Prime Minister’s warm words on ‘levelling up’ are betrayed by the reality on the ground in the North.

“We need a strong, long term industrial strategy which builds long lasting prosperity across the regions, not ad hoc pots of money held by Whitehall that we have to fight over.”