Osborne fuels growth with 21 enterprise zones

Aaron Morby 14 years ago
Share

Chancellor George Osborne has set out the Government’s plans to refuel Britain’s stalled economy.

Osborne unveiled 21 new enterprise zones, major planning reforms to help builders and a £250m package to help first time buyers.

In a Budget that strips away red tape, he said the first 10 enterprise zones will be in: Birmingham and Solihull; Leeds; Sheffield; Liverpool; Greater Manchester; West of England; Tees Valley; North Eastern; The Black Country; Derby & Derbyshire with Nottingham & Nottinghamshire.

The Mayor of London later announced that the Royal Docks in East London will be designated an enterprise zone, mirroring the Isle of Docks more than 20 years ago.

These zones will function as havens for development, benefiting from zero business rates and deregulated planning.

The Chancellor also committed to funding 21 new university technical colleges, double the number previously earmarked and pledged to create 50,000 more apprenticeships.

In his widely trailed Budget for growth Osborne said the proceeds of the bank levy will fund a £250m commitment to first time buyers, called FirstBuy.

This is intended to help 10,000 home owners get onto the ladder for the first time and support up to 50,000 jobs in the house building industry.

Stamp duty will be levied on mean value not bulk value of homes, which will promote institutional investment.

The Chancellor ushered in planning reforms to prioritise growth and jobs and will force planners to presume in favour of sustainable developments, but Green Belt will be protected.

The Government will also insist that planning is handled in 12 months.

He also pledged to introduce in full Lord Young’s health and safety reforms.

The Chancellor released £100m to develop four new science centres of excellence in the country.

He said: “This is a Budget for making things not making things up. We have a plan and we are sticking to it.

“We have put fuel into the tank of the British economy.”

    Construction Budget in brief

  • 21 new enterprise zones
  • Pilot public sector land auctions
  • New 12 month guarantee for planning and appeals
  • £200m extra funding for rail projects
  • Sheffield retail quarter regeneration scheme
  • Extra £100m for councils to repair potholes
  • £250m for first time buyers
  • £100m for four new science centres
  • 24 new university technical colleges by 2014
  • Redoubling line from Swindon to Kemble
  • General Budget in brief

  • Growth down from 2.1% to 1.7%
  • Corporation tax down 2% in April
  • Fuel duty down 1p/l tonight
  • Tax allowance rises £8,105 in 2012
  • Borrowing down £146bn to £29bn by 2015/16
  • 50,000 more apprenticeships over 4 years

Reaction

Stewart Baseley, chairman of the Home Builders Federation, said: “The severity of the housing crisis dictates that work doesn’t stop here. It is crucial that all today’s announcements are built on, regulation is reduced, land supply increased and the planning system simplified.

“The Budget shows ministers are listening and serious about tackling our housing crisis. This is a very positive start.”

“The Chancellor’s commitment to switch to a ‘presumption in favour of sustainable development’ based planning system, where the default answer is ‘yes’, is also a positive statement of intent.

“If the Government is to meet its commitment to increase housing supply, more permissioned land must be made available.”

HBF still believes that further action on reducing regulation is required, to supplement announcements today that the Minister will write to Local Authorities with regards to Section 106 ‘infrastructure tariff’ payments, and on more sensible carbon efficiency targets, if more potential housebuilding sites are to become viable.

Michael Ankers, chief executive of the Construction Products Association, said: ‘We welcome the serious attempt to unblock the planning system, encouragement for sustainable development, opening up economic activity with the introduction of Enterprise Zones and helping first time buyers access the housing market.

“The Chancellor has recognised the enormous difficulty the housing market has been facing for several years and the introduction of financial help for first time buyers is a much needed boost. However, this is a very modest step and is unlikely to make much of a dent in the 100,000 shortfall of new build that this sector is currently facing.

“The government has made a big play on its desire to make the UK an attractive place to do business and we welcome a number of the measures, including reduction in corporation tax, support for fiscal initiatives and improved R&D tax credits, but we were very disappointed to see the early introduction of a carbon floor price which could well drive business investment away from the UK.”

Latest news

Balfour Beatty terminates Danny Sullivan labour deals

Around 500 workers on HS2 will be moved to alternative agencies or be taken on direct
1 day ago

Trio face prosecution after Hinkley site death

Main contractors and client to face charges over death of site supervisor
1 day ago

Buyers see recovery in house building sector

But civil and commercial work still in the doldrums
2 days ago

Apprentice saws-off thumb on hotel refurb site

Court hears how digit was reattached and teenager continued training with another firm
2 days ago

Laing O’Rourke tops June contracts league

£919m animal super lab dominates new orders
2 days ago

TSL turnover smashes £500m as profit almost trebles

Data centre and logistics contractor rises high on surging demand
2 days ago

Gleeson Homes chief exec leaves business after restructure

Management revamp after "challenging" year
2 days ago

Green light for 1,600-home Oldham town centre overhaul

Plans for over 1,600 homes across six regeneration sites approved
2 days ago

DSM wins Norwich city centre clearance job

Anglia Square shopping centre clearance for £300m scheme
2 days ago

13-year-old becomes UK’s youngest qualified digger driver

Grandson of Gallagher Group chairman sets industry record
2 days ago

Cubby reborn in £12m Svella-backed takeover

£50m revenue target set as 14 firms combine under new Cubby Group banner
3 days ago

North East NHS trusts plot £3bn health estate overhaul

Market engagement begins for major construction push across four trusts
3 days ago

HG goes green on cranes in £1.2m switch to battery power

Diesel-free crane drive cuts fuel bills by 94%
3 days ago

Developer fined £165,000 for fire safety failings

Firm ignored fire safety orders on apartment job in Preston
3 days ago

Bidding to start for £1.8bn North West framework

Contractors invited to bid for latest Procure Partnerships deal
3 days ago

Hill hits record £90m profit as homes pipeline swells

Build-to-rent push and £4.8bn contracting book to fuel next growth phase
3 days ago

Rayner unveils £39bn plan to build 300,000 social homes

Council building revival and rent reform feature in social and affordable homes plan
4 days ago

Keltbray bounces back with £3.2m profit

Tighter controls and smarter project selection fuel strong turnaround
4 days ago

VINCI JV wins 500-home twin town centre revamps

Chester Northgate phase 2 and Northwich Weaver Square schemes move to delivery stage
4 days ago

80 energy projects unlocked as Ofgem backs grid expansion

£24bn energy networks deal gets green light from regulator
5 days ago

How to see your stories on the Enquirer

Join our Suppliers and Buyers directory to get your news published
4 days ago

Henley lands Midland Mill revamp on Leeds tower scheme

Restoration of 18th-century mill kicks off on South Bank regeneration project
4 days ago

New boss at Eric Wright Civil Engineering

Gavin Hulme takes top job as Diane Bourne moves to group role
4 days ago

Pinewood submits £1bn data centre plan

Studio giant adds green and learning spaces to tech hub blueprint
5 days ago

Record results after TClarke goes private

Britain's biggest M&E contractor flourishes after de-listing
5 days ago

Dalkia lands £200m nuclear maintenance deal

1,000 nuclear FM staff to join M&E contractor
5 days ago

Construction comeback to outpace wider economy

Arcadis forecast fueled by spending review optimism
6 days ago

First steel goes up on giant car battery site

Severfield gets to work on McAlpine Somerset site
6 days ago

Permasteelisa wins cladding deal on Bovis city tower

Facade specialist lands package at 60 Gracechurch Street
5 days ago

Fox buys recycled asphalt specialist Fisher

Acquisition adds major recycled asphalt capacity in north west
6 days ago