Latest News

Reeves, UK's Reeves, approves $21 Billion of Public Transport Projects Outside London

The British Finance Minister Rachel Reeves pledged 15.6 billion pounds (about $21.1 billion) to transport projects outside London, which have suffered for years from underinvestment.

Reeves made the announcement in Rochdale (northwest England) of her first investment commitments based on her Spending Review from June 11, which will set government budgets until 2029.

The Labour government of Prime Minister Keir starmer, which has suffered heavy losses in local elections, is being pressed to demonstrate that it is improving public services and infrastructure.

Organisations like the OECD have identified outdated and insufficient transport links as a major factor in the productivity shortfall of British cities located outside the capital.

Reeves stated that "a Britain that is better-off cannot depend on a few places forging ahead the rest of the nation."

She said that the focus on prioritising investment in public infrastructure in areas where it would be most profitable had resulted in growth being supported too few places, and created large gaps between regional economies.

The previous Conservative government allocated the majority of the 15,6 billion pounds to local projects after cancelling a part of a north-south high-speed rail line.

Many city regions are still waiting on the central government to give them the go ahead.

Tough Choices

The budget announcement made on Wednesday represents an agreement to fund transportation projects between 2027/28 - 2031/32.

These include investments in public transport for local areas in the West Midlands and Greater Manchester as well as in northeast England, South Yorkshire and Northeast England. West Yorkshire is also getting its first mass transit system, a region with 2.3 million residents.

Since 1998, Britain has conducted periodic reviews of government spending, but this one is the first to cover several years since 2015. The only other review in 2021, which focused on the COVID epidemic, covered a single year.

The Institute for Fiscal Studies, a non-partisan organization, said that this review may be "one the most important domestic policy events" for Labour, as it will force the government to make tough decisions between spending on healthcare, defense and other areas.

Reeves, amid reports of tensions in the government said that she had rejected promising proposals by her ministerial peers due to budget restrictions.

"There were good things that I had to say no to. Reeves explained that it was important to control the public finances.

She added that police spending would rise, but did not provide any details. ($1 = 0.7398 pound) (Additional reporting and editing by Mark Potter, Aiden Lewis and Mark Potter in London)

(source: Reuters)