GovWire

Speech: Business Secretary sets out ambition for further, faster growth

Competition Markets Authority

February 13
12:35 2025

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Good morning, and thank you very much for that warm introduction, Alan,and my sincere thanks to the whole team here at Samsung for so generously hosting us, today.

Its actually quite emotional to be honest, it would have been someone like my grandfather who dug out that coal, sent it down here, and a few generations later I get to be on this stage doing this.

But Samsung is a company synonymous with the best in cutting-edge design and innovation; and much of it is on full display here within these four walls.

It is a fitting venue to discuss this governments ambition to go further and faster in our growth missionensuring that your investments that you outlined here in the UK pay dividends.

Three years ago, I gave my first speech as the then Shadow Business Secretary and I promised we would be both a pro-business and a pro-worker party

A party rooted not just in the experience of working people, but which recognises, above all else, that you cannot rebuild an economy without a flourishing private sector; backed by an unapologetically pro-business government.

I committed to partnering with you in making our offer to the country one you could get behind.

And you gave us the ideas, energy and, in some cases, explicit support that was needed to win a strong majority and an even stronger mandate from the British people. A mandate to deliver our Plan for Change.

Today, I want to reflect on the progress that we have made as a government. I want to talk candidly about what I believe we need to do;

And I want to provide a clear direction, some reassurance and I hope some excitement and optimism about the future.

Now I am extremely proud of the work that my department has done in the first seven months of this Government.

That includes our record-breaking International Investment Summitwhere we secured 63bn of inward investment commitments for the UK

that was where we published our Industrial Strategy Green Paper

and where we launched our Industrial Strategy Council expertly led by Clare Barclay. Im so glad Clare could join us ahead of the councils meeting later today.

Building on from the investment summit, at Davos last month, the Chancellor and I sent a clear message to the international community: that the UK is a great place to invest and do business. We have the lowest corporation tax in the G7, uncapped R&D tax credits, and 100% full expensing on capital allowances.

And ahead of our Trade Strategys publication, we are leveraging our relationships with Europe, China, India and the Gulf and beyond so businesses can make the UK their base to connect with global markets.

And this is important, because in response to the announcements made by the US this week, I want to reiterate that under this government, the UK will always champion free, fair and open trade. That is what is in our national interest.

And where we have seen the opportunity for an active government to bring business and workers together, my department has always been on the pitch

Whether thats securing a better deal for the workforce at Port Talbot

engaging on the takeover of Royal Mail

Or the renegotiated deal that saw Navantia acquiring Harland and Wolff and protect 1,000 jobs at shipyards across the UK.I will always roll up my sleeves and get involved.

But being candid none of this work in itself is sufficient, if it does not lead across the board to improved business confidence, to greater investment, and to higher household income, in every part of the country.

And on that I, and the whole government, recognise the challenge, and we accept it.

In the Budget the government had a responsibility to fix the foundations and restore economic stability.

And while I recognise that the Budget capped corporation tax, extended capital allowances, and raised the employment allowance threshold from this April, I know it asked a great deal of business. I dont underestimate that for a second.

We will never take that contribution your contribution for granted.

You are playing your part in fixing this country, in stabilising the public finances, in investing in our people and helping us rebuild our crumbling infrastructure.

And we know it is imperative that therefore we clear the path for the private sector to thrive that we deliver the right conditions for growth.

Its why, on top of the 100 billion of investment unveiled at the Budget, this Government has thrown its full support behind a third runway at Heathrow.

Its why were making the Oxford Cambridge growth corridor a success with the right transport and public services to foster growth.

Its why through our expanded Office for Investment and the National Wealth Fund we will be supporting transformative investments throughout the country from West Yorkshire to the West Midlands, and Glasgow and Greater Manchester.

The challenges we face as government make all the things we promised to do even more critical.

And I relish that.

And I dont believe there are easy answers to complex problems.

But I do believe that good policy, good strategies, and good government working hand-in-hand with the private sector, can make a difference.

And I want my constituents to feel, and to be, better off.

And only a pragmatic, business-orientated government can deliver that.

And that to me is what being pro-worker, and pro-business means.

And I believe this national UK Government is able to deliver on this mission because, fundamentally, we can offer what no-one else can:

First of all, political stability sadly, a rare commodity in many countries these days.

Secondly, openness to the rest of the world at a time where that is clearly coming under pressure.

And most importantly of all, we are offering a willingness to use our mandate in Parliament to transform the business and investor environment.

And we are using our Industrial Strategy to ensure that our policies are made with business, for business.

As you know, in October last year, we consulted on our Industrial Strategy Green Paper; our blueprint to channel investment and support into our countrys high-growth sectors and high potential places.

In that green paper, we posed a series of questions, and you answered in great detail. You told us that you need access to a high-skilled workforce.

And that is why we have launched Skills England, bringing in flexibilities for the Growth and Skills levy, allowing for shorter apprenticeships and giving employers more control over training.

Meanwhile our Great Britain Working White Paper has already set out detailed plans to support people back into work.

And for key sectors such as AI and life sciences, weve committed to looking at visa routes for the most highly skilled, ensuring those routes continue to work for the UK. The upcoming Immigration White Paper will set out plans to make our immigration, skills, and visa systems work better and more coherently.

You told us that planning has become a by-word for inefficiency.

So, were making it quicker and simpler for developers to build on brownfield land.

Were making it much easier to build laboratories, gigafactories, data centres, and digital network grid connections.

And were preventing campaigners from repeatedly launching hopeless legal challenges against planning decisions. ?

You have also told us that access to capital needs drastic improvement.

Here again were listening and were responding. That is why the Government is creating pension megafunds, unlocking billions of pounds of investment. At the same time, were delivering on Lord Hills Listing Review to allow the FCA to rewrite the UKs Prospectus Regime for faster fund-raising.

And, finally, you told us that we need a regulation reset in this country.?

Day in, day out I hear from business leaders who say to me that regulation and regulators are too cumbersome.

Theyre too slow.

Theyre too focused on theoretical issues, with little understanding of how businesses and markets actually operate.

And Ive heard that message loud and clear.

One of our foremost regulators, the Competition and Markets Authority, has recently made great strides in addressing some of these issues.

And today, my department is publishing a consultation on a new Strategic Steer for the CMA to accelerate this work.

This isnt about meaningless platitudes - about the cutting of red tape.

Its about effective consumer protection, competition law and digital market powers so that we create a level-playing field for businesses to compete on. We need to address genuine harm done by those who are not playing by the rules.

Our Strategic Steer asks the CMA to minimise uncertainty for business by being proactive, transparent, timely, predictable and responsive in its engagement.

And I know, under Sarah Cardell and the new Interim Chair, Doug Gurr, the CMA has already taken significant steps in adopting this approachin always having growth and investment in mind.

Its extensive work around the merger of Vodafone and Three is a fantastic example of thatas is the CMAs launch of a Growth and Investment Council to identify opportunities for greater competition.

And there is more to come.

I know Sarah and the CMA have set out their plans to deliver re

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