GORDON Brown’s Government failed to throw its efforts into spreading wealth from the City of London until the shock of the banking crash, his key ally admitted yesterday.
Lord Mandelson said the state’s role in boosting industry and manufacturing – instead of relying on financial services – were “questions that we weren’t really asking in government two years ago”.
The Business Secretary’s comments, to a conference titled New Industry, New Jobs, are the starkest admission yet that Labour ministers were too focused on banking and other financial services in the Square Mile.
They open up what Lord Mandelson believes will be a crucial divide at next year’s election – how the parties plan to build a “balanced recovery” and avoid past mistakes.
The Prime Minister has announced a £1bn “National Investment Corporation”, to seed-fund innovative small firms in new technologies such as biosciences, pharmaceuticals, plastic electronics and low-carbon wind and wave power.
Many of them are expected to be in the North- East.
Meanwhile, the former Hartlepool MP pledged yesterday to “drive forward industrial activism”, while accepting it had taken the banking crisis to “focus our minds”.
He pledged that his New Industry, New Jobs programme would reverse the policy of “two decades or more”.
There would be a new focus on low-carbon skills in higher education, opening up government procurement to smaller, more innovative companies, and on helping local partners deliver “key national priorities”.
Firms who will benefit
NORTH-EAST firms taking a share of the Government’s £1m investment plan include: ■ The Printable Electronics Technology Centre, at the North-East Technology Park (NETPark), at Sedgefield – handed a £20m investment in July, to create 250 jobs locally and 1,500 nationally.
■ The industrial biotechnology demonstrator at Wilton, on Teesside – given £12m in July, to pioneer low-carbon techniques and help petrochemical companies diversify.
■ A £20m facility, in the deep-water berth at Hartlepool Dock, making underwater cables for the groundbreaking Wave Hub wave energy generation project, in the South-West.
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