Keir Starmer pledges to scrap red tape to boost UK investment

BBC  Sir Keir Starmer sitting behind a microphone at the BBC, gesturing with his hand, with various BBC logos on the wall behind himBBC

The prime minister promised to scrap regulation that “needlessly holds back investment” in the UK as he opened a major business summit in London.

Sir Keir Starmer told business leaders he wants to “rip out” bureaucracy, and asked the UK’s competition watchdog to prioritise growth.

The boss of US pharmaceutical giant Eli Lilly, David Ricks, told the BBC changes to regulation would encourage his firm to increase investment in the UK.

However, the government is facing a balancing act ahead of the Budget in two weeks’ time having already signalled that some taxes will rise.

On Sunday, Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds did not rule out an increase in the rate of National Insurance paid by employers.

Labour pledged in its manifesto not to raise National Insurance. But Reynolds told Sky News: “That pledge – it was taxes on working people so it was specifically in the manifesto, a reference to employees and to income tax.”

Musk row

Earlier this month it emerged that the world’s richest person, Elon Musk, had not been invited to the investment summit.

Speaking to the BBC’s Today programme, Technology Secretary Peter Kyle said the billionaire would have been “very, very welcome if he had an open investment programme that we could have latched on to”.

“We would love to engage with Elon Musk,” Kyle said.

“If he opens up an investment programme and there is global competition for it, believe me we will be first in line.”

Ahead of the summit, some of the world’s biggest companies wrote to the Times saying greater stability had increased the UK’s attractiveness.

The letter to the Times, signed by major banks such as Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan and insurance companies including Aviva, said there was a “very real opportunity for the UK to grow its economy by attracting international investment”.

Eli Lilly announced on Monday that it anticipated making a new investment of £279m into the UK, including studies into tackling obesity.

Ricks said that the UK had to take a new approach to attracting investment now that it was no longer part of the EU.

“I think the difference in the UK is – separate from Europe – it’s a relatively small market for most multinationals and certainly for Americans, so something needs to be quite different to make it interesting,” he said.

Ricks added that greater “flexibility would be encouraging to draw even more investment for the future”.

Kyle said “you don’t have to cut corners” on regulation to “get innovation through”.

Asked if the UK would regulate less than the EU to attract businesses, he said: “I would say you need to regulate smartly and you need to regulate creatively.”

The run-up to the conference has been overshadowed by a row over comments made by a minister about P&O Ferries.

A £1bn investment in the London Gateway container port by P&O Ferries owner DP World appeared to be in doubt after Transport Secretary Louise Haigh described the ferry company as a “rogue operator” in a government press release.

Haigh was publicly rebuked by the prime minister, and DP World will now be attending the conference, along with the bosses of investment giants such as Blackrock and L&G.

On Monday, DP World confirmed that the £1bn investment in London Gateway would go ahead, adding it would create 400 new jobs and make it the UK’s largest container port within five years.

Australian firm Macquarie, which has been blamed for saddling Thames Water with unsustainable debts when it was its biggest shareholder, is promising to invest £20bn in the UK over the next five years, including an electric car charging network.

The conference is taking place at London’s Guildhall, and will feature keynote speeches from both the prime minister and Chancellor Rachel Reeves.

The government will ask the UK’s competition watchdog, the Competition and Markets Authority, to prioritise growth, investment and innovation.

While the government is seeking to be pro-business, citing growing the economy as its top priority, it is also aiming to strike a balance by being pro-worker as well.

Last week, it published details of a planned overhaul of workers’ rights, which would see people being able to get sick pay from the first day they are ill and claim unpaid parental leave as soon as they start a job.

However, some business groups are concerned about how the changes will work in practice, and there are fears some may put off hiring new staff.

The Federation of Small Businesses, whose members employ up to 250 workers, described the plans as “clumsy, chaotic and poorly planned”.

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