Speech: Chancellor vows to go further and faster to kickstart economic growth
Thank you everyone.
It’s fantastic to be here at Siemens at
this amazing facility.
Today, I want to talk about economic
growth.
Why it matters.
How we achieve it.
And what we are going to do further and faster to deliver it.
Before we came into office…
… the Prime Minister and
I have said loud and clear:
Economic growth is the number
one mission of this government.
Without growth, we cannot cut
hospital waiting lists or put more police on the streets.
Without growth, we cannot meet our climate goals…
…
or give the next generation the opportunities that they need to
thrive.
But most of all…
… without economic growth…
… we cannot improve the lives of ordinary working people.
Because growth isn’t simply about lines on a graph.
It’s about the pounds in people’s pockets.
The
vibrancy of our high streets.
And the thriving businesses
that create wealth, jobs and new opportunities for us, for our
children, and grandchildren.
We will have succeeded in our
mission when working people are better off.
I know that the
cost of living crisis is still very real for many families across
Britain.
The sky high inflation and interest rates of the
past few years have left a deep mark…
… with too many people
still making sacrifices to pay the bills and to pay their mortgages.
But we have begun to turn this around.
Everything I
see as I travel around the country gives me more belief in Britain.
And more optimism about our future.
Because we as a
country have huge potential.
A country of strong communities,
with small and local businesses at their heart.
We are at the
forefront of some of the most exciting developments in the world…
… like artificial intelligence and life sciences…
…
with great companies like DeepMind, AstraZeneca, Rolls Royce… and of
course Siemens…
… delivering jobs and investment across
Britain.
We have fundamental strengths – in our history, in
our language, and in our legal system – to compete in a global
economy.
But for too long, that potential has been held back.
For too long, we have accepted low expectations and accepted
decline.
We no longer have to do that.
We can do so
much better.
Low growth is not our destiny.
But
growth will not come without a fight.
Without a government
willing to take the right decisions now to change our country’s future
for the better.
That’s what our Plan for Change is all about.
That is what drives me as Chancellor.
In my Mais
lecture in March last year, I set out my approach to achieving
economic growth…
… and identified the fundamental barriers to
realising our full potential.
The productive capacity of the
UK economy has become far too weak.
Productivity, the driver
of living standards…
…has grown more slowly here than in
countries like Germany and the US.
The supply side of our
economy has suffered due to chronic underinvestment…
… and
stifling and unpredictable regulation…
… not helped by the
shocks we have faced in recent years.
[redacted political
content]
The strategy that I have consistently set out…
… is to grow the supply-side of our economy…
…
recognising that first and foremost…
… it is businesses,
investors and entrepreneurs who drive economic growth…
… a
government that systematically removes the barriers that they face –
one by one and has their back
This strategy has three
essential elements:
First, stability in our politics, our
public finances and our economy - the basic condition for secure
economic growth.
Second, reform - reform which makes it
easier for businesses to trade, to raise finance and to build.
And third, investment, the lifeblood of economic growth.
Let me explain each of those in turn.
Stability – the
first line of our manifesto was a promise to bring stability to the
public finances.
It is the rock upon which everything else is
built.
And it is the essential foundation of our Plan for
Change.
Because economic stability is the precondition for
economic growth.
That’s why the first piece of legislation
that we passed as a government was the Budget Responsibility Act…
… so never again will we see our independent forecaster
sidelined.
[redacted political content]
At my first
Budget in October…
… it was my duty as Chancellor…
…
to fix the foundations of our economy, and repair the public finances
that we inherited.
To restore stability and create the
conditions for growth and investment.
I set out new fiscal
rules which are non-negotiable, and will always be met.
We
began to rebuild our NHS and our schools – the start of a programme of
public service reform.
I capped the rate of corporation tax -
and I extended our generous capital allowances for the duration of
this parliament - as the CBI and the BCC have long called for.
And I protected working people after a cost of living crisis…
… by freezing fuel duty…
… and with no increases in
their National Insurance, Income Tax or VAT.
But taking the
right decisions and the responsible decisions does not always mean
taking the easy decisions.
The increase in Employers’
National Insurance contributions has consequences on business and
beyond.
I said that up front in my Budget speech.
I
accept that there are costs to responsibility.
But the costs
of irresponsibility would have been far higher.
Those who
oppose my Budget know that too.
That is why, since October, I
have seen no alternative put forward [redacted political content].
No alternatives to deal with the challenges we face.
No alternatives to restoring economic stability…
…
and therefore no plan for driving economic growth.
Alongside
stability, we need to drive forward the reform which makes investment
more likely…
… by removing the constraints on the supply side
of our economy…
… making it easier for businesses to trade…
… to raise finance…
… and to build.
Let me
first address our approach to trade.
We stand at a moment of
global change.
In that context, we should be guided by one
clear principle above all.
To act in the national interest…
… for our economy…
… for our businesses…
…
and for the British people.
That means building on our
special relationship with the United States under President Trump.
The Prime Minister discussed the vital importance of growth
with the President last weekend…
… and I look forward to
working with the new Treasury Secretary, Scott Bessent…
… to
deepen our economic relationship in the months and the years ahead.
Acting in our national interest also means resetting our
relationship with the EU – our nearest and our largest trading partner
– to drive growth and support business.
We are pragmatic
about the challenges that we have inherited from the last government’s
failed Brexit deal.
But we are also ambitious in our goals.
[redacted political content]
… we will prioritise
proposals that are consistent with our manifesto commitments…
… and which contribute to British growth and British
prosperity…
… because that is what the national interest
demands.
Our approach to trade also means building stronger
relationships with fast-growing economies all around the world.
That is why I led a delegation to China for the first Economic
and Financial Dialogue since 2019…
… alongside world-leading
financial service businesses, including HSBC, Standard Chartered and
Schroders…
… unlocking £600 million of tangible benefits for
the UK economy.
And I am pleased to confirm that the Business
and Trade Secretary will shortly visit India …
… to restart
talks on the free trade agreement and bilateral investment treaty
[redacted political content].
Our businesses can only realise
these opportunities if they can recruit the skilled staff that they
need.
So we are reforming our employment system to create a
national jobs and careers service.
We have created Skills
England to meet the skills of the next decade in sectors like
construction and engineering.
And we will deliver fundamental
reform of our welfare system.
That includes looking at areas
that have been ducked for too long…
… like the rising cost of
health and disability benefits…
… and the Secretary of State
for Work and Pensions will set out our plans to address this ahead of
the Spring Statement.
Next, the Immigration White Paper, that
will bring forward concrete proposals to bring the overall levels of
net migration down.
But we know that the UK is in an
international competition for talent in vital growth sectors.
That is why last week, I set out plans for attracting global
talent.
We will look at the visa routes for very highly
skilled people…
… so the best people in the world choose the
UK to live, work and create wealth…
… bringing jobs and
investment to Britain.
To help businesses access the finance
and support they need to grow…
… we have delivered
significant reforms to provide greater flexibility for firms and
founders to raise finance on UK capital markets, by rewriting the UK’s
listing rules.
In my Mansion House speech, I announced a
series of reforms to our pensions system…
… including the
creation of larger, consolidated funds…
… which have much
greater capacity to invest in high growth British companies at the
scale that we need them to.
The consultation on these reforms
is already complete and the final report will be published in the
Spring.
Yesterday we confirmed that we have plans to go
further, whilst always protecting the important role that pension
funds play in the gilt market.
We will introduce new
flexibilities for well-funded Defined Benefit schemes…
… to
release surplus funds where it is safe to do so…
… generating
even more investment into some of our fastest growing industries.
I know too that businesses are held back by a complex and
unpredictable regulatory system…
… and that is a drag on
investment and innovation.
We have already provided new
growth-focused remits to our financial services regulators…
…
we have announced a new interim Chair of the Competition and Markets
Authority…
… and we have established the Regulatory
Innovation Office, with an initial focus on synthetic biology, space,
AI, and connected and autonomous vehicles.
But we need to go
further and we need to go faster.
So earlier this month, I
met the Heads of some of our largest regulators.
They have
already provided a range of options to drive growth in their sectors…
… and proposals for how they can be more agile and responsive
to businesses…
… and we will publish that final action plan
in March to make regulation work much better for our economy.
To get Britain building again…
… we have delivered
the most significant reforms to our planning system in a generation.
I have been genuinely shocked about how slow our planning
system is.
By how long it takes to get things done.
Take the decision to build a solar farm in Cambridgeshire – a
decision the Energy Secretary took only a few weeks into the job in
July…
[redacted political content]
The Deputy Prime
Minister has already driven significant progress across government in
addressing these issues.
My colleagues have determined 13
major planning decisions in just six months…
… including for
airports, data centres and major housing developments.
We
have significantly raised housing targets across our country and made
them mandatory, so that we can build one-and-a-half million homes in
this parliament.
We have reformed decades-old “green belt”
policies, making it easier to build on the “grey belt” land around our
major cities.
And we have opened up our planning system to
build new infrastructure – like onshore wind farms or data centres
driving the AI revolution.
Having listened closely to calls
from business groups like the Institute of Directors…
… and
businesses across our economy about the need to speed up
infrastructure delivery…
… including Mace, Skanska and Arup
who are here today…
… and members of our British
Infrastructure Taskforce like Lloyds, Blackrock and Phoenix…
… we have now set out plans to go even further.
Last
week we confirmed our priorities for the Planning and Infrastructure
Bill …
… to rapidly streamline the process for determining
applications…
… to make the consultation process far less
burdensome…
… and to fundamentally reform our approach to
environmental regulation.
The problems in our economy…
… the lack of bold reform that we have seen over decades…
… can be summed up by a £100 million bat tunnel built for
HS2…
… the type of decision that has made delivering major
infrastructure in our country far too expensive and far too slow.
So we are reducing the environmental requirements placed on
developers when they pay into the nature restoration fund that we have
created…
…so they can focus on getting things built, and stop
worrying about bats and newts.
And to build our new
infrastructure like nuclear power plants, trainlines and windfarms
more quickly…
… we are changing the rules to stop blockers
getting in the way of development…
… through excessive use of
Judicial Review.
This Bill, the Planning and Infrastructure
Bill, is a priority for this government.
It will be
introduced in the Spring…
… and we will work tirelessly in
parliament to ensure its smooth, and speedy and rapid delivery.
By providing a foundation of economic stability…
…
and by delivering the reforms needed to make it easier for businesses
to succeed and grow…
… we will create the right conditions to
increase investment in our economy – the final key element of our
strategy.
Investment and innovation go hand in hand.
I want to see the sounds and the sights of the future
arriving.
Delivered by amazing businesses like Wayve and
Oxford Nanopore.
They are the future.
And Britain
should be the best place in the world to be an entrepreneur.
That is why we protected funding for research and
development…
… and it is why one of the first decisions I
made as Chancellor…
… was to extend the Enterprise Investment
Scheme and the Venture Capital Trust schemes for a further 10 years…
… to get more investment into new companies, driving their
innovation and growth.
I am determined to make Britain the
best place in the world to invest.
That was my message in
Davos last week.
That ambition demands action.
The
International Investment Summit that we hosted in October delivered
£63 billion of investment right across our country…
… from
Iberdrola doubling its investment in clean energy in places like
Suffolk…
… Blackstone investing £10 billion in a data centre
in Northumberland…
… and Eren Holdings investing £1 billion
in advanced manufacturing in North Wales.
While the lifeblood
of growth is business investment, a strategic state has a crucial role
to play.
That is why we established the National Wealth
Fund…
… to create that partnership between business, private
investors and government to invest in the industries of the future…
… like clean energy.
Today I can announce two further
investments by the National Wealth Fund.
First, a £65 million
investment for Connected Kerb, to expand their electric vehicle
charging network across the UK.
And second, a £28 million
equity investment in Cornish Metals…
… providing the raw
materials to be used in solar panels, wind turbines and electric
vehicles…
… supporting growth and jobs in the South-West of
England.
There is no trade-off between economic growth and
net zero.
Quite the opposite.
Net zero is the
industrial opportunity of the 21st century, and Britain must lead the
way.
That is why we will publish a refreshed Carbon Budget
Delivery Plan later this year, which alongside the Spending Review,
will set out our plans to deliver Carbon Budget 6.
Today, I
can also announce that we are removing barriers to deliver 16
gigawatts of offshore wind…
… by designating new Marine
Protected Areas to enable the development of this technology in areas
like East Anglia and Yorkshire…
… crowding in up to £30
billion of investment in homegrown clean power.
And there’s
more.
Our industrial and manufacturing base, brilliantly
represented by Make UK, have been banging their heads against the wall
for years at the lack of a proper industrial strategy from government.
That is why we have launched our modern industrial strategy…
… to drive investment into the industries that will define our
success in the years ahead.
We have already provided funding
to unlock investment in sectors like aerospace, automotives and life
sciences…
… and we have set out reforms to boost financial
services, the AI sector and creative industries.
We are not
wasting any time, and we will move forward with the next stages of the
Industrial Strategy ahead of its publication in the Spring.
We will work with the private sector to deliver the
infrastructure that our country desperately needs.
This
includes the Lower Thames Crossing, which will improve connectivity at
Port of Tilbury and Dover, London Gateway and Medway…
…
alleviating severe congestion…
… as goods destined for export
come from the North, and the Midlands and across the country to
markets overseas.
To drive growth and deliver value for money
for taxpayers, we are exploring options to privately finance this
important project.
And we have changed course on public
investment, too…
… with a new Investment Rule to ensure that
we don’t just count the costs of investment – we count the benefits
too.
We are now investing 2. 6% of GDP on average over the
next five years, compared to 1. 9% planned by the previous government.
.
… delivering an additional £100 billion of growth-enhancing
capital spending…
… which catalyses private sector
investment…
… in more housing…
… better transport
links…
… and clean energy.
These are significant
steps in just six months…
… and we are seeing some
encouraging signs in the British economy.
The IMF have
upgraded our growth prospects for 2025…
… the only G7 country
outside the US to see this happen.
This gives us the fastest
growth of any major European economy this year.
And a global
survey of CEOs by PWC, has shown Britain is now the second most
attractive country in the world for businesses looking to invest.
The first time the UK has been in that position for 28 years.
This is all welcome news.
But there is still more
that we can and will do.
I am not satisfied with the position
we are in.
While we have huge amounts of potential, the
structural problems in our economy run deep.
And the low
growth of the last 14 years cannot just be turned around overnight.
This has to be our focus for the duration of the parliament.
Because the situation demands us to do more.
And
today I will go further and faster in kickstarting economic growth.
Our mission to grow our economy is about raising living
standards in every single part of the United Kingdom.
Manchester is home to the UK’s fastest growing tech sector.
Leeds is one of the largest financial services centres outside
of London.
These great northern cities have so much potential
and promise…
…which our brilliant metro mayors, Andy Burnham
and Tracy Brabin, are working hard to realise…
… just like
our other metro mayors are doing to deliver new opportunities in their
areas.
And there is so much more that government can do to
support our city regions.
To achieve this requires greater
focus on two key areas: infrastructure and investment.
If we
can improve connectivity between towns and cities across the North of
England, we can unlock their true growth potential…
… by
making it easier for people to live, travel and work across the area.
At the Budget, I set out funding for the Transpennine Route
Upgrade…
… a multi-billion-pound programme of improvements
that will connect towns and cities from Manchester to York via
Stalybridge, Leeds and Huddersfield.
We are delivering
railway schemes to improve journeys for people across the North…
… including upgrades at Bradford Forster Square and by
electrifying the Wigan-Bolton line.
We have committed to
supporting the delivery of a new mass transit system in West
Yorkshire.
And in Spring, we will publish the Spending Review
and a 10-Year Infrastructure Strategy…
… which will set out
further detail of our plans for infrastructure right across the UK.
New transport infrastructure can also act as a catalyst for
new housing.
We have already seen the benefits that unlocking
untapped land around stations can deliver in places like Stockport…
… where joint work spearheaded by Andy Burnham and council
leaders has delivered new housing and wider commercial opportunities.
We will introduce a new approach to planning decisions on land
around stations, changing the default answer to yes.
We are
working with the devolved governments to ensure the benefits of growth
can be felt across Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland…
…
including by partnering with them on the Industrial Strategy to
support their considerable sectoral strengths.
And in
December, I met with Metro Mayors from across England.
They
told me that more opportunities for investment are vital if their
local economies are to grow in the years ahead.
We are
listening closely to them.
As the Metro Mayor of Liverpool,
Steve Rotherham, has called for…
… we will review the Green
Book and how it is being used to provide objective, transparent advice
on public investment across the country, including outside London and
the Southeast.
This means that investment in all regions is
given a fair hearing by the Treasury that I lead.
The Office
for Investment is going to be working hand in hand with local areas…
… to develop a commercially attractive pipeline of investment
opportunities for a global audience…
… starting with the
Liverpool City Region and the North East Combined Authority, led by
Kim McGuinness.
The National Wealth Fund is establishing
strategic partnerships to provide deeper, more focused support for
city regions, starting in Glasgow, West Yorkshire, the West Midlands,
and Greater Manchester.
We are supporting key investment
opportunities across the UK.
The government is backing Andy
Burnham’s plans for the redevelopment of Old Trafford, which promises
to create new housing and commercial development around a new
stadium…
… to drive regeneration and growth in the area.
We are moving forward with the Wrexham and Flintshire
Investment Zone…
… focusing on the area’s strengths in
advanced manufacturing…
… backed by major businesses like
Airbus and JCB…
… to leverage £1 billion of private
investment in the next ten years…
… creating up to 6,000
jobs.
[redacted political content]
So I can announce
today that we will work with Doncaster Council and the Mayor of South
Yorkshire, Oliver Coppard…
… to support their efforts to
recreate South Yorkshire Airport City as a thriving regional airport.
And finally, I am pleased to announce a partnership between
Prologis and Manchester Airport Group in the East Midlands, where the
Metro Mayor Claire Ward is doing an excellent job growing the local
economy there.
Prologis and MAG will work together to build a
new advanced manufacturing and logistics park at East Midlands Airport
…
… unlocking up to £1 billion of investment and 2,000 jobs
at the site…
… a major investment from a global business into
our country…
… representing a huge vote of confidence in the
East Midlands and in the UK.
This is just the start of our
work to get more investment into every nation and region of Britain.
Next, I want to set out further detail for plans for the area
we are in today.
Oxford and Cambridge offer huge potential
for our nation’s growth prospects.
Only 66 miles apart…
… these cities are home to two of the best universities in the
world…
… and the area is a hub for globally renowned science
and technology firms.
This area has the potential to be
Europe’s Silicon Valley.
To make that a reality, we need a
systematic approach to attract businesses to come here and to grow
here.
At the moment, it takes over two and a half hours to
travel between Oxford and Cambridge by train.
There is no way
to commute directly by rail from places like Bedford and Milton Keynes
to Cambridge.
And there is a lack of affordable housing right
across the region.
In other words, the demand is there…
… but there are far too many supply side constraints on
economic growth here.
We are going to fix that.
The
Ox Cam arc was initially launched in 2003 – over 20 years ago.
[redacted political content]
We are not prepared to
miss out on the opportunities here any longer.
So working
with the Deputy Prime Minister…
… who is already driving
forward vital work in the region…
… we are going further and
faster to unlock the potential of the Oxford-Cambridge Growth
Corridor.
First, we are funding the transport links needed to
make the Oxford Cambridge growth corridor a success…
…
including East-West Rail, with new services between Oxford and Milton
Keynes starting this year…
… and road upgrades to reduce
journey times between Milton Keynes and Cambridge.
East West
Rail will also support vibrant new and expanded communities along the
route.
We have already received proposals for New Towns along
the new railway…
… with 18 submissions for sizeable new
developments.
At Tempsford – the nexus of the East Coast
Mainline, the A1 and East West Rail…
…we will move quicker to
deliver a mainline station, meaning journey times to London of under
an hour…
… and to Cambridge in under 30 minutes when East
West Rail is operational.
Second, we are ensuring that the
area has the right infrastructure and public services in place to
support the growth corridor as it expands.
A new Cambridge
Cancer Research Hospital is being prioritised for investment as part
of wave 1 of the New Hospital Programme.
Water infrastructure
has also been a major hindrance to development.
So we have
now agreed water resources management plans, unlocking £7. 9 billion
of investment in the next 5 years…
…including plans for the
new Fens Reservoir serving Cambridge and the South East Strategic
Reservoir near Oxford.
And I can confirm today that the
Environment Agency have now lifted their objections to new development
in Cambridge, following this government’s intervention to address
water scarcity…
… which means 4,500 additional homes, new
schools, and new office, retail and laboratory space can be built.
Third, I am delighted that Cambridge University have come
forward with plans for a new flagship innovation hub at the centre of
Cambridge…
… to attract global investment and foster a
community that catalyses innovation, as other cities around the world
like Boston and Paris have done.
Just yesterday, Moderna
completed the build for their new vaccine production and R&D; site in
Harwell, right here in Oxfordshire, alongside a commitment to invest a
further £1 billion in the UK.
And we are creating a new AI
Growth Zone in Culham to speed up planning approvals for the rapid
build-out of data centres.
And finally, to take this project
forward at real pace…
… and catalyse private sector
investment into the region…
… I am pleased to announce that
the Deputy Prime Minister and I have asked Lord Patrick Vallance to be
the champion for the Oxford Cambridge Growth Corridor.
Lord
Vallance has extensive experience across the sciences, academia, and
government.
He will work with local leaders and with the
Housing and Planning Minister to deliver this exciting project…
… including with Peter Freeman, who is already doing excellent
work in Cambridge…
… and a new Growth Commission for Oxford,
which will help to accelerate growth in the city and its surrounding
area.
This is the government’s modern Industrial Strategy in
action.
With central government, local leaders and business
working together…
… the Oxford and Cambridge Growth Corridor
could add up to £78 billion to the UK economy by 2035 …
…
driving investment, innovation and growth.
Finally, I come to
the decision that perhaps more than any other…
… has been
delayed…
… has been avoided…
… has been ducked.
The question of whether to give Heathrow …
… our only
hub airport…
… a third runway…
… has run on for
decades.
The last full length runway in Britain was built in
the 1940s.
No progress in eighty years.
Why is this
so damaging?
It’s because Heathrow is at the heart of the
UK’s openness as a country.
It connects us to emerging
markets all over the world, opening up new opportunities for growth.
Around three-quarters of all long-haul flights in the UK go
from Heathrow.
Over 60% of UK air freight comes through
Heathrow.
And about 15 million business travellers used
Heathrow in 2023.
But for decades, its growth has been
constrained.
Successive studies have shown that this really
matters for our economy.
According to the most recent study
from Frontier Economics, a third runway could increase potential GDP
by 0. 43% by 2050.
Over half – 60% of that boost, would go to
areas outside London and the South-East.
… increasing trade
opportunities for products like Scotch whiskey and Scottish salmon -
already two of the biggest British exports out of Heathrow.
And a third runway could create over 100,000 jobs.
For international investors, persistent delays have cast doubt
about our seriousness towards improving our economic prospects.
Business groups, like the CBI, the Federation of Small
Businesses and the Chambers of Commerce right across the UK…
…as well trade unions like GMB and Unite are clear…
…
a third runway is badly needed.
In 2018, the previous
government steered its Airports National Policy Statement through
parliament.
But no action was taken.
It simply sat
on the shelf.
We are taking a totally different approach to
airport expansion.
This Government has already given its
support to expansion at City Airport and at Stansted.
And
there are two live decisions on Luton and Gatwick which will be made
by the Transport Secretary shortly.
But as our only hub
airport, Heathrow is in a unique position - and we cannot duck the
decision any longer.
I have always been clear that a third
runway at Heathrow would unlock further growth…
… boost
investment…
… increase exports…
… and make the UK
more open and more connected.
And now, the case is stronger
than ever…
… because our reforms to the economy…
…
like speeding up the planning system…
… and our plans for
modernised UK airspace…
… mean the delivery of this project
is set up for success.
So I can confirm today that this
Government supports a third runway at Heathrow…
… and is
inviting proposals to be brought forward by the summer.
We
will then take forward a full assessment through the Airport National
Policy Statement.
That will ensure that the project is value
for money - and our clear expectation is that any associated surface
transport costs will be financed through private funding.
And
it will ensure that a third runway is delivered in line with our
legal, environmental and climate obligations.
Heathrow
themselves are clear that their proposal for expansion will meet
strict rules on noise, air quality and carbon emissions.
And
we are already making great strides in transitioning to cleaner and
greener aviation.
Sustainable Aviation Fuel reduces CO2
emissions compared to fossil fuel by around 70%.
At the start
of this month, the Sustainable Aviation Fuel mandate became law.
And today I can announce that we are investing £63 million
into the Advanced Fuels Fund over the next year…
… and we
have today set out the details of how we will deliver a Revenue
Certainty Mechanism to encourage investment into this growing
industry.
These measures will encourage more investors to
back production in the UK, bringing good, high-skilled jobs to areas
like Teesside…
… demonstrating that investment in the right
technology can help us deliver both our growth and our clean energy
missions.
Now is the moment to grasp the opportunity in front
of us.
By backing a third runway at Heathrow, we can make
Britain the world’s best connected place to do business.
That
is what it takes to make bold decisions in the national interest.
That is what I mean by going further and faster to kickstart
economic growth.
The work of change has begun.
We
have already made great progress.
But I am not satisfied.
And I know that there is more to be done.
We must go
further and faster if we are to build a brighter future.
The
prize on offer is immense.
The next generation with more
opportunities than the last.
An engineer in Teesside, working
in some of the most exciting industries of the future – from carbon
capture to sustainable aviation fuel.
A scientist in Milton
Keynes or Bedford, working in our life sciences industry to solve some
of the most important medical challenges in the world.
A
small business owner in Scotland, knowing that they can expand and
export to new markets right across the globe.
Wealth created,
and wealth shared, in every part of Britain.
This is a
Government on the side of working people.
Taking the right
decisions to secure their future, to secure our future.
Stepping up to the challenges we face.
Ending the era
of low expectations.
Putting Britain on a different path.
Delivering for the British people.
And I am
determined, this Government is determined, to do just that.
Thank you.