Pictured: Jerry Blackett, chief executive of Birmingham
Chamber of Commerce Group (BCCG)
Business leaders have welcomed the government's decision to
allocate £14.9 million to the Greater Birmingham and Solihull
Local Enterprise Partnership (LEP) to help get building projects
off the ground.
But Jerry Blackett, chief executive of Birmingham Chamber of
Commerce Group (BCCG) urged the LEP to also remain focussed on the
bigger picture.
He said: "This is a very welcome gesture of faith from the
Government in LEPs generally and Greater Birmingham and Solihull in
particular. It should give a welcome shot in the arm to the
construction industry, which has been badly hit in the current
economic climate.
"However, the LEP must remain focussed on a few strategic goals,
seeking to maximise their influence over mainstream budgets for
things like employment and skills and major transport projects. Of
course it is useful to win additional monies but the new sums are
very small compared to, for example, the £6 - £7
billion of tax-payers money that gets spent just in Birmingham each
year. Our economy will get transformed by making best use of these
sums. The great thing about the LEP is the invitation it has from
government to create an economic strategy. Delivery of this then
comes from the alignment of all mainstream budgets, which needs
national agencies in particular to challenge the way they worked in
the past."
The government's £500 million Growing Places Fund is
designed to 'help boost economic growth by getting the required
infrastructure built to enable the creation of new jobs and homes
by getting stalled projects moving again'.