Chancellor's growth plan must show political sacrifice to prevent business hibernation - CBI chief

14 Nov 2022 12:52 PM

On the week of the Autumn Statement, the CBI Director-General, Tony Danker, says that business agrees that the Chancellor will have to make tough fiscal choices on spending and tax to achieve market stability and control inflation. However, business fears that the Government is not willing to make tough political choices to get growth going in 2023.

Not matching action on spending and tax with measures to tackle labour shortages and productivity is likely to be damaging in the short and long term. Many businesses are doing their 2023 budgets right now. They do see growth ahead and want to invest but fear that all signals from policymakers are warning them against doing so.

A statement on Thursday that doesn’t encourage investment in capital projects and new innovation risks another decade of flatlining productivity for the UK, and a possible recurrence of spending cuts and tax rises in the future.

Understanding the need for stability, the CBI has outlined a limited number of proposals. These include long term tax reform to match new high corporation tax with investment allowances for firms who invest in the economy, as well as continued use of the Government balance sheet to create markets and stimulate further green investment by the private sector.

It’s main and modest fiscal ask is to smooth the upcoming cliff-edge in business rates in April 2023 which threatens the viability of many UK high streets.

However, most of the CBI submission is focused on economic reforms that don’t cost the Chancellor anything. Changes to immigration, regulation and planning are now critical levers to get firms to invest but will require the Government to make political sacrifices.

Tony Danker, CBI Director-General, said:

“The Autumn Statement will need to deliver the market stability the new Prime Minister and Chancellor have pledged since taking office. But while I have no problem with tough choices to deliver stability, I do worry that the Government won’t take tough choices to deliver growth.

“All of us need to accept now that with fiscal and monetary policy tightening, we need many more pro-growth policies for our economy, if we’re to avoid a decade of no growth.

“The Chancellor has said he will set out a plan for growth on Thursday. But if this is only warm words and aspirations it won’t stop businesses pulling back from investment. It must tackle the real barriers we face right now.

“A desperate lack of workers is inflating wages and stopping firms growing.  Our planning rules allow local officials to hamper major projects we need. Our regulatory regime doesn’t do enough to incentivise investment and innovation  and it is far more important to change that than partisan efforts to simply repeal EU laws - which wont make any positive difference to most firms.

“We need to make the UK an attractive place to invest. After the mini-Budget many global firms are choosing to avoid investing here in 2023. And in the past three weeks I have talked to hundreds of firms who need to decide this month whether to invest for next year or whether to go into hibernation – in fear of predicted recession and no action from policymakers.

"There are real opportunities for growth in Britain next year. These obviously can’t now be achieved from a major stimulus package, but nor can Government believe that warm words alone will give firms confidence.”

The CBI has developed a series of policies to boost our potential/supply-side growth including:

Immigration and Skills

Tax roadmap 

Regulation

Planning