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Reeves, UK's Reeves, approves $21 billion in transport projects outside London

The British Finance Minister Rachel Reeves announced on Wednesday that she would commit 21.1 billion pounds (15.6 billion pounds) to transport projects outside London. These cities have been plagued by years of unfulfilled promises and underinvestment.

Reeves will announce her first investment commitments in a speech to be delivered in Manchester, north-west England. Her June 11 Spending Review sets budgets for all government departments during the remainder of this parliamentary term.

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Organisations like the OECD have identified outdated and insufficient transport links as a major factor.

Reeves stated in an excerpt of her speech, provided by the Finance Ministry.

She said that the growth of too few regions and large gaps in between them was the result of this type thinking.

The former Conservative government led by Rishi Sunak, who cancelled a part of a north-south high-speed rail line in order to reallocate cash to local projects, had earmarked the majority of the 15,6 billion pounds.

London has yet to give the green light for many cities.

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

These include investments in metro systems in the West Midlands and Greater Manchester as well as the North East, South Yorkshire and the North East. West Yorkshire – a city region with a population of 2.3 millions – will also have its first mass transit system.

Jonny Haseldine is the head of the British Chambers of Commerce's business environment department.

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 of spending could be "one the most important domestic policy events" for Labour.

(source: Reuters)