UK calls for economic transformation after COVID-19 - GulfToday

UK calls for economic transformation after COVID-19

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British employers called on Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Monday to overhaul regulation and tax rules to help them meet the challenges of Brexit, the post-pandemic recovery and preparing for a net-zero carbon economy.

The Confederation of British Industry (CBI) said 2021 should be a turning point for economic policy to break the pattern of weak productivity that has weighed on growth for more than a decade.

“This country will never have a greater opportunity to transform our economy and society,” CBI Director-General Tony Danker said. “This is the moment where we have a genuine chance to make big bets on how the UK economy will grow and compete.”

The CBI urged regulators to prioritise investment, the creation of economic clusters around the country to foster innovation and better skills training.

Steps like these could help unlock 700 billion pounds ($989 billion)of extra economic growth, the CBI said.

It also said a long-term plan was needed for taxation that would allow Britain to fix the damage to its public finances wrought by the biggest-ever budget deficit in peacetime without hurting business investment.

Finance minister Rishi Sunak welcomed the CBI proposals.

“Government and business will work together in a shared commitment on everything from decarbonisation to innovation levelling up future skills and global trade success,” he said.

Britain’s economy slumped by almost 10 per cent last year and is due to grow by 7.25 per cent in 2021, according to the Bank of England. But the central bank has forecast that growth after 2022 will return to its slow, pre-pandemic pace.

Meanwhile the Shopper numbers across Britain rose 1.1 per cent in the week to May 22 compared with the previous week, helped by the reopening of indoor hospitality after months of COVID-19 lockdown, researcher Springboard said on Monday.

It said shopper numbers, or footfall, increased 2.4 per cent across UK high streets and by 1 per cent in shopping centres, but fell 1.7 per cent in retail parks.

 

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