UK economy in growth ‘doom loop’ after decades of
underinvestment
Institute for Public Policy Research points to
£500bn-plus underspend compared with other advanced economies
Richard
Partington Economics correspondent
@RJPartington
Tue 20 Jun
2023 00.01 BST
More than
half a trillion pounds’ worth of underinvestment by government and business
over recent decades has left Britain’s economy trapped in a growth “doom loop”,
according to a thinktank.
Sounding
the alarm as the economy struggles to gain momentum, the Institute for Public
Policy Research said the UK risked falling further behind comparable wealthy
nations without a sharp turnaround in approach.
Business
investment is lower in the UK than in any other country in the G7, and 27th out
of 30 OECD countries, ahead of only Poland, Luxembourg and Greece.
Highlighting
a severe shortfall in public and private investment stretching back over
several decades, the IPPR’s research showed that Britain had ranked below the
G7 average since 2005 for spending on infrastructure, research and development,
skills and training.
Had the UK
maintained its position at the G7 average since that date, the private sector
would have invested an extra £354bn in real terms. If public sector investment
had also held that position, the UK government would have invested an
additional £208bn between 2006 and 2021.
However,
the UK has steadily slipped down the global investment league tables as
successive governments have held back from boosting expenditure, alongside a
faltering performance in the private sector – amounting to a shortfall versus
the G7 average worth the equivalent of 30 Elizabeth line rail projects.
The
centre-left thinktank said low investment put Britain at risk of being left
behind in a global race to develop the green industries of the future, which
are forecast to be worth $10.3tn (£8tn) to the global economy by 2050.
The
findings come as Rishi Sunak’s government attempts to reboot economic growth
with a focus on boosting business investment, including with a package of tax
reliefs announced as part of the spring budget. Business leaders say political
and economic instability, Brexit, high inflation and rising interest rates are
deterring firms from investing in Britain.
The IPPR
said increased public investment could “crowd-in” private sector investment and
give confidence to companies to choose the UK as a place to build the green
companies of the future – provided the government invested with a sense of
longevity and certainty, as Joe Biden’s administration had done in the US.
George
Dibb, an associate director for economy at IPPR, said: “If the economy is the
engine of a country, investment is its fuel. But the UK’s tank is running on
empty and it’s harming economic growth, driving inequality and slowing progress
towards net zero and energy security.
“Currently,
the UK is experiencing a debilitating case of investment-phobia, and the
government’s aversion to investing to seize future opportunities is stopping us
from getting out of the growth doom loop we find ourselves in.”
The
government was approached for comment.

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