The British Chambers of Commerce (BCC) is calling on the Government to tackle the problems of the UK’s worn-out infrastructure to fire up growth.Among the recommendations in a new report, published today, the BCC is calling for ministers to:
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The report has been produced by the BCC’s Local Economy of the Future Challenge Group, drawing on expertise from Chambers and businesses of all sizes and sectors.
It advises that the Infrastructure and Planning Bill, which is expected to be put before Parliament soon, must have the interests of business at its heart. And it calls for Government to introduce long-term policy stability to help restore business confidence that was hit by the cancellation of the latter stages of HS2. The report also sets out a pathway to improve capacity in the planning system, through a joint initiative with business to get 100 more trained planners into local authorities. The BCC has set up the programme to address the bottlenecks in decision-making due to a lack of resources. BCC research has found that more than three-fifths of business leaders (62%) say they just don’t have the right skills in their workforce, rising to nearly three-quarters (74%) in the manufacturing and construction sectors. Two-thirds (66%) of business leaders say their views aren’t taken into account when it comes to local infrastructure decisions – on everything from digital to road improvements. This rises sharply to more than eight in ten (81%) when it comes to national infrastructure decisions. Transport is a major challenge that needs fixing. For low-paid workers, buses are key. But more than six in ten (62%) company leaders say their local bus and tram networks are poor. Shevaun Haviland, Director General of the British Chambers of Commerce, said:
Prof. Miranda Barker OBE DL, Chief Executive Officer at East Lancashire Chamber of Commerce, added:
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