Rachel Reeves will pledge to “fight” for “growth” and say that Britain “can do so much better” in a major speech, after Cabinet ministers were ordered to ditch policies that could stand in the way of growing the economy.
The Chancellor will say that Britain has “fundamental strengths” but has been “held back” and accepted “stagnation” in her address in Oxfordshire on Wednesday.
Ms Reeves will also use the speech to claim the so-called “Oxford-Cambridge growth corridor” has “the potential to be Europe’s Silicon Valley” and offers “huge economic potential for our nation’s growth prospects”.
Centred around growth, it is also expected to include support for the expansion of Heathrow Airport – an issue which some Cabinet ministers have opposed in the past – and reiterate the Government’s support for the redevelopment of Manchester United’s Old Trafford.
During her speech, Ms Reeves is expected to describe Britain as a country of “huge potential” but also say that “for too long, that potential has been held back”.
“For too long, we have accepted low expectations, accepted stagnation and accepted the risk of decline. We can do so much better,” she will say.
“Low growth is not our destiny. But growth will not come without a fight. Without a Government that is on the side of working people. Willing to take the right decisions now to change our country’s course for the better.”
It comes as the Chancellor and Sir Keir Starmer suggested to business leaders that Cabinet colleagues have been ordered to ditch policies which could stand in the way of their efforts to grow the economy.
New reservoirs and a new train station are among the measures set to be announced by the Chancellor during the speech, which will include plans to boost connectivity in the region around the two university cities.
As part of the delivery of what Ms Reeves will call the “Oxford-Cambridge growth corridor”, she will also touch on funding for East-West rail, a long-proposed railway line that would connect the cities, as well as a new railway station in Tempsford.
She will say the cities are “two of the least affordable in the UK” and existing transport options mean that to travel between them “by train takes two-and-a-half hours” while “there is no way to commute directly from towns like Bedford and Milton Keynes to Cambridge by rail”.
“Oxford and Cambridge offer huge economic potential for our nation’s growth prospects,” she is expected to say.
“Just 66 miles apart, these cities are home to two of the best universities in the world, two of the most intensive innovation clusters in the world and the area is a hub for globally-renowned science and technology firms in life sciences, manufacturing and AI.
“It has the potential to be Europe’s Silicon Valley. The home of British innovation.”
She will later add: “In other words, the demand is there but there are far too many supply side constraints on economic growth in the region.”
It is also expected the Chancellor will touch on the Environment Agency having dropped its objections to a new development near Cambridge that could see 4,500 new homes being built.
In December, South Cambridgeshire District Council announced that planning permission had been issued for up to 4,500 new homes at Waterbeach after the Environment Agency had withdrawn their opposition.