Economic and Taxation Policies: Jobs, Growth and Prosperity Debate

Full Debate: Read Full Debate
Department: HM Treasury

Economic and Taxation Policies: Jobs, Growth and Prosperity

Lord Bilimoria Excerpts
Thursday 13th November 2025

(1 day, 11 hours ago)

Lords Chamber
Read Full debate Read Hansard Text Watch Debate Read Debate Ministerial Extracts
Lord Bilimoria Portrait Lord Bilimoria (CB)
- View Speech - Hansard - -

My Lords, the Government have spoken about growth as their priority from day one and, to be fair, they are doing a few good things. They have carried on the Help to Grow: Management programme, which was started by the previous Government. Some 10,000 businesses have already gone through the programme; 12,000 are enrolled on it and it is delivered by 60 business schools around the country, and I am proud to be patron of the Small Business Charter, which I took over from my late friend, Lord David Young. It is a 12-week mini-MBA—just the right thing to be doing.

The noble Baroness, Lady O’Grady, spoke about small modular nuclear reactors. When I was president of the CBI in 2020-22, I was like a stuck record saying, “Let’s build these, let’s build these”. Finally, now, five years later, we are starting to build them. In entrepreneurship, it is problem, solution, action—but quickly. I am glad the Government are finally doing that.

On the priority of research and development and innovation, we spend 1.7% of GDP; America spends over 3%. We need to increase expenditure on R&D and innovation. I am chair of the International Chamber of Commerce UK; the ICC is the largest business organisation in the world, with 45 million members. We have promoted digital trade, which I am glad to see the Government have taken as part of their industrial strategy. The UK now stands at a crossroads. Outdated paper-based systems are stifling growth. The UK can be a leader; our trade represents £1 trillion of the UK economy. Does the Minister agree that implementing digital trade would see benefits such as £25 billion in trade growth, £224 billion in efficiency savings, 35% efficiency gains for SMEs, £22 billion in SME working capital unlocked, trade transaction times cut from two months to one hour, an 80% reduction in trade transaction costs, shipping costs reduced by 18% and workforce productivity increased by 60%? I thank the noble Lord, Lord Elliott, for initiating this debate.

The Government talk about growth, yet so many of the measures they have implemented are anything but helping growth. They are hampering growth, whether this is through the rise in employers’ NI, inheritance tax on farmers and family businesses, VAT on private schools and removing business rates exemptions for private schools, or VAT reclaim for tourists, which was taken away by the previous Government. Should the Government not bring back that relief? Then we would have more tourists spending money on goods as well as on staying here and on restaurants.

Due to the non-dom regime change, over 10,000 people already have left, including many people I know. They pay £8 billion of taxes, employ people, invest, and conduct philanthropy in this country. We will lose all of that, because money walks. Now there is talk of the £30 billion hole to be filled and of more taxes going up in the Budget—which, sadly, is on my birthday.

We have 1 million NEETs in this country—young people who do not work—and we have 9 million people of working age who do not work. We need to get these people back to work.

I co-chair the All-Party Parliamentary Group for International Students. Will the Minister confirm the talk that a levy on international students is going to be introduced in the Budget and that the two-year post-graduation work visa is going to be reduced to 18 months? These international students bring in £42 billion to the economy. We treat them as immigrants. Should they not be taken out of the net migration figures?

There is a fear of immigration. Bad immigration is bad for this country, but good immigration is great for this country. Without the 16% of ethnic minorities, this country would not be the sixth-largest economy in the world.

I was part of the PM’s delegation to India last month—it was fantastic. I spoke in the Finance Minister of India’s conference, the annual Kautilya Economic Conclave, the title of which was “Seeking Prosperity in Turbulent Times”. India is growing at 6.5% a year, with a target of 8%. In our latest figures, released today, we have grown at 0.1%—a flatlining economy. We have a debt to GDP of 100%; high debt servicing costs; the highest tax burden in over 70 years; high government expenditure; unemployment of 5%; inflation almost double the target at 3.8%; and defence expenditure that needs to go up to 3%. We need a plan—we need to be bold.

I conclude with this. In June, I visited Argentina and met President Milei and his whole team. He has a very clear plan of bringing down expenditure and inflation. Every single Minister we met sang from the same hymn sheet. This Government need a plan; they need to be bold. Then we can get growth.