Unleashing the potential of the UK’s cities is critical to boost growth, repair their social fabric and meet our net zero targets according to a new report.

The final report from the UK Urban Futures Commission, produced in partnership between the Royal Society of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce (RSA) and Core Cities UK, calls on the Government to move away from the current trend of short-termism, witnessed in national debates on HS2, net zero and the future of local government.

It states that although cities including Birmingham, Manchester, Liverpool, Cardiff, and Glasgow have undergone a locally led transformation over the last twenty years, there is still much to do to ensure they reach their full potential. This will not only benefit the people of those cities but their surrounding regions and the whole of the UK.

Bringing the UK’s Core Cities up to their European peers has the potential to add £100bn (around 5%) to GDP each year and if social outcomes could mirror those in London, then this would lift 250,000 people out of unemployment, 1.2million out of poverty and increase healthy life expectancy by up to 8 years.

The UK Urban Futures Commission, co-chaired by RSA Chief Executive Andy Haldane and Core Cities UK chair and Mayor of Bristol Marvin Rees, says that empowered local leaders, working with the private sector and in a new partnership of equals with government, can raise the £1 trillion needed to realise their potential.

By releasing the handbrake on investment and through a new suite of powers then the positive steps being taken by city leaders and private sector partners could be turbo-charged.

Among the report’s recommendations for national and city leaders are that national government should adjust its fiscal rules, to focus on maximising long-term net wealth rather than lowering debt over the near term, removing the unnecessary cap on productive investment in our cities and connectivity between them.

National leaders should then fully empower city leaders, giving them statutory responsibility for raising prosperity and the tools to deliver this with an end to the familiar competitive bid culture and getting serious about their ability to raise and keep a greater proportion of taxes at a local level

Cities should draw up long-term local prosperity plans to enhance the economic, social and environmental health, agreed by a broad range of stakeholders, which should sit alongside a return of a national industrial strategy that has cities at its heart.

Cities should put in place new architecture for the delivery of these plans, such as a Cities Investment Hub to provide expert advice on investment projects and Urban Wealth Funds for professionally managing the assets of a city.

New sources of private capital should be mobilised, making greater use of public investment funds focused on supporting cities’ objectives, and by developing a Cities Investment Compact in which five per cent of the asset of financial institutions are committed to local investments.

Andy Haldane said:

“Half the UK population lives in a city, 62 per cent of all new businesses registered in the UK start in cities and the eleven Core Cities generate 18 per cent of UK output. Yet there is so much more our cities could deliver for the economy, society and the environment. This report provides a set of practical steps for doing so, to be taken by empowered and enabled local leaders supported by national governments. By showing the way, we hope this report helps summon the collective will of leaders to take the necessary steps to uncork the potential in our great cities.”

Mayor Marvin Rees said: “At the heart of this report is the belief in the potential of cities and the people who live in them. Our report overturns the tired narrative that strong cities somehow damage the economic prospects of surrounding areas. The way forward will come from dismantling the out-of-date Whitehall and Westminster bidding culture and truly allows cities to stand on their own two feet economically.”

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