We cannot regulate our way to growth

Even before this week’s bond market turmoil, the newish Labour government tacitly acknowledged that not all was going to plan, with the economy continuing to stagnate. Over the Christmas period, in an apparent act of desperation, UK prime minister Keir Starmer, chancellor Rachel Reeves and business secretary Jonathan Reynolds wrote a letter to the UK’s biggest regulators to ask for help with its growth plan. Regulatory bodies such as energy watchdog Ofgem, water regulator Ofwat, the Environment Agency and the Financial Conduct Authority were urged by the government to submit proposals on how best to boost the economy.

Of course, government ministers should always be engaging with their functionaries for advice. But to openly admit they have had to beseech them for help to meet their central policy commitment of ‘growth, growth, growth’ was an extraordinary testament to Labour’s lack of ideas.

We shouldn’t hold our breath waiting for Starmer’s administration to deliver on his pledge to get rid of regulation ‘where it is needlessly holding back the investment we need to take our country forward’. The reality is that his government, like its predecessors, will only add more to the regulatory burden. Indeed, Labour’s manifesto explicitly promised tougher systems of regulation on a huge spread of businesses.

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