Rachel Reeves pushing ‘generational opportunity’ for fiscal devolution to English regions, and admits student loan system is ‘broken’ – business live


Reeves asks officials to draw up plans for fiscal devolution

Boom! Rachel Reeves then tells her audience that she has asked the Treasury to work with mayors and businesses to develop a roadmap for future fiscal devolution.

This plan will be published at this year’s budget.

It will set out plans to give regional leaders control of a share of some national taxes – which Reeves points out have long been allocated by central governments. It will include income tax, she suggests.

The chancellor says these reforms will begin with places which have the greatest capacity to deliver them and the greatest potential to benefit.

She insists that it is “not about new taxes, and it’s not about higher tax”, promising “I will not ask taxpayers to pay more”.

These reforms will be fiscally neutral, focused on sharing and retaining a portion of existing revenues with the places that generated them, she says.

Reeves promises:

double quotation markThese reforms will represent a permanent transfer of power and resources, not another exercise in local ambition.

Taxpayers will be able to see what is being delivered with their money and hold local leaders to account for the results, she insists.

She calls it “a genuine break with the past”, calling it:

double quotation markA generational opportunity for Britain’s regions to make their own future.

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Reeves: Closer alignment with Europe will benefit UK

Nearly 90 minutes after beginning her lecture, Rachel Reeves wraps up by answering another question about Europe – and repeating that closer alignment can bring benefits.

She repeats her earlier warning that some economists estimate the hit to the UK economy from Brexit could be around 8% of GDP.

[I’m not sure at all, but the chancellor could be referring to recent research from the CEPR, here].

Thus, making trade and investment easier between the UK and European Union countries can begin the process of bringing some of that loss back.

Ultimately, that will be felt in people’s pockets and in their living standards, she concludes.

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