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Andy Burnham Outlines Radical Devolution Plans for UK Prime Minister Bid
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BBC Business6 g öncePolitik5 dk okumaUnited Kingdom

Andy Burnham Outlines Radical Devolution Plans for UK Prime Minister Bid

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  • Andy Burnham outlined plans for radical devolution across the UK if he becomes Prime Minister, aiming to boost economic growth by shifting power from Whitehall to regions like Greater Manchester, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland.
  • Economists note mixed past results but see potential in specific English city regions.

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Warum es wichtig ist

Andy Burnham, a prominent Labour figure, outlined his vision for radical devolution across the UK, aiming to boost economic growth by empowering regions. This follows previous "levelling up" efforts by the Conservative government.

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Andy Burnham promised the "biggest rebalancing of power our country has seen" as part of his plans for the UK if he becomes the next prime minister.

In his first major policy speech, Burnham said on Monday he would seek to take power away from Whitehall and devolve it to all parts of the UK. This would include Greater Manchester and other city regions in England.

But the former Mayor of the Greater Manchester Combined Authority also said he would further extend devolution in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland - though not giving detail - and also promised to give Greater London more devolved powers.

Burnham, who was sworn in as the new MP for Makerfield last week, said this radical devolution of power was essential for delivering higher economic growth in all parts of the UK. "We will never get growth up to the level Britain needs unless every single postcode in the land is set up to contribute to it," he said.

BBC Verify has looked at what impact further devolution could be expected to have on economic growth across the UK.

Scotland has had extensive devolution, with the Scottish parliament now holding powers covering health, education, local government, environment, justice and policing.

Holyrood also has powers to set most income tax rates (although not the level of the tax-free personal allowance) and has some control over welfare.

The Welsh Senedd's devolution powers are more limited compared with Scotland, though it does include running the NHS in Wales, education, local government and housing.

The Senedd also has some tax powers, including the ability to to vary income tax rates. But, unlike Scotland, it has no justice or policing powers.

Under the terms of the 1998 Good Friday Agreement, the Northern Ireland Assembly has significant devolved powers, including over health, education and housing.

There has also been some devolution to English city regions over the past decade, albeit less extensive than for Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

Manchester has some of the most extensive devolved powers of any of the English city regions, with some authority over transport, housing, skills and health spending.

Most economists who have studied the impact of devolution have not identified any significant increase in overall economic growth rates in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland over the past quarter of a century.

There is also no clear evidence of those nations catching up with the UK average, although it's important to stress the UK average is heavily influenced by the performance of London and the South East of England.

Official statistics show that the GDP per capita - a measure of productivity - of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland in 2023 was broadly similar relative to the UK average as it was in 1998, with Scotland at around 93%, Northern Ireland at 83% and Wales at 74%.

However, analysts say this does not mean that devolution has been an economic failure, as it is possible that the nations might have experienced economic decline relative to the rest of the UK if they had still been centrally governed.

Events like Brexit might also have had a disproportionate effect on some parts of the UK, making it harder to separate out the impact of devolution.

And some Scottish nationalists argue full independence is required for Scotland to realise its underlying economic potential. Some Welsh nationalists argue similarly for Wales.

Some analysts have questioned whether those recent productivity figures are reliable, in part, because some of the high growth spots are in residential areas, and that they could be explained in part by errors in the data.

Nevertheless, many economists do think Greater Manchester has performed better than other UK city regions over the past 15 years - and they argue it's justified to partially attribute this to the devolution of powers, particularly on transport, planning and housing.

Devolution has helped to deliver this record on housing because the Greater Manchester mayoralty is empowered to set the city-region's housing strategy, direct housing investment funding and co-ordinate affordable housing programmes. Devolution has enabled the increase in investment because one of the devolved roles of the mayor of a city region is to encourage companies to invest in an area, particularly multinationals, to create jobs and drive local growth.

Some economists also point to the Bee Network of buses which brought the system under control of the mayoralty, and the encouragement of private sector investment in Manchester city centre.

"There's been a recognition [among the Greater Manchester leadership] that the future of Manchester is a big city that is offering lots of different opportunities, but particularly to higher value added activity," says Andrew Carter of the Centre for Cities think tank.

"They're prepared to do what is required - build the housing, support the expansion of the university, support research and development, try to introduce a transport system which really supports all of that kind of stuff. And as a result you become more attractive to investment, whether it's foreign or domestic."

Burnham is not the first politician who has sought to boost growth in the North and Midlands.

Boris Johnson's Conservative government had an objective of "levelling up" the UK economically.

Some analysts say that Johnson's project failed in part because it did not put sufficient state resources and investment into achieving it.

That government established a £5bn levelling up fund to, among other things, regenerate high streets and upgrade local transport.

But analysts pointed out that the post-reunification plan to bring up East Germany closer to the productivity of West Germany after 1990 had cost around €2 trillion in state spending between 1990 and 2014, or the equivalent of £70bn a year.

Burnham on Monday pledged "to strive for equivalent living conditions in all parts of Britain" and said that this would borrow from Germany's "basic law", which has a similar wording.

However, he also said that he would stick to the "current fiscal rules" and the existing Labour manifesto, which would likely limit how much his government would be able to borrow or raise tax to finance devolution.

Additional reporting by Aidan McNamee

Worauf zu achten ist

KI-Ausblick — Möglichkeiten, keine Fakten

  • Andy Burnham will continue to advocate for radical devolution as part of his political platform.

    Sehr wahrscheinlich · Innerhalb von Monaten

Offene Fragen

  • How would Burnham's government finance extensive devolution given fiscal rules?
  • What specific powers would be devolved to Greater London, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland?
  • How would the "equivalent living conditions" principle be implemented?

Verwandte Themen

This article was originally published by BBC Business.

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