16 December 2024
James Cleverly asks if an Essex Mayor would be able to cut taxes to compete with London

Following the Ministerial statement on the publication of the Government’s English devolution White Paper, James Cleverly asks the Minister if the proposals would allow a future Mayor of Essex to create a less regulated or less taxed business environment to compete with London.

Mr James Cleverly (Braintree) (Con)

If devolution means anything, it means giving local leaders the right to do things differently. If a future mayor of Essex wants to compete with London by creating a less heavily regulated or less heavily taxed business environment, would that individual have the power to do so under the proposals put forward by the Government?

The Minister for Local Government and English Devolution (Jim McMahon)

It is in the eye of the beholder. If the right hon. Gentleman wants to turn Essex into Monaco, I suspect that it will not happen. But if he is asking for genuine freedoms and flexibilities so that local leaders can make the right decisions to attract investment, assemble sites, invest in infrastructure, and remove barriers to planning and infrastructure, that is absolutely where we are going. On the issue of tax and fiscal devolution, we are very clear that the White Paper represents a moment in time; it is very much the start, not the end. What should be read in the White Paper is an ambition to provide certainty across Government and to make sure that the level of ambition is raised. When the right hon. Gentleman sees the schedule of devolution across the programme and the competencies—which are very important for economic development and regeneration—he will see that there is a lot of scope there.

Hansard