{"id":26333,"date":"2023-11-16T22:08:57","date_gmt":"2023-11-16T22:08:57","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/mormonmediareviews.com\/?p=26333"},"modified":"2023-11-16T22:08:57","modified_gmt":"2023-11-16T22:08:57","slug":"brexit-bonuses-continue-britain-is-a-magnet-for-foreign-money","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/mormonmediareviews.com\/politics\/brexit-bonuses-continue-britain-is-a-magnet-for-foreign-money\/","title":{"rendered":"Brexit bonuses continue – Britain is a magnet for foreign money"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/p>\n
Dominic Johnson said Britain has become one of the top investment destinations in the world since we left the EU.<\/p>\n
The government\u2019s investment minister said the UK is now the leading country in Europe for new Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) projects.<\/p>\n
Britain has the most valuable tech sector on the continent and the most tech unicorns – a start-up company worth more than $1billion (\u00a3880million).<\/p>\n
FDI projects created 80,000 new jobs here in 2022, he said.<\/p>\n
Mr Johnson said: \u201cOur plan is working. Just look at Tata\u2019s \u00a34billion gigafactory in Somerset, Marubeni’s \u00a310 billion for green projects, Metsa Tissue’s \u00a3500million in Goole, to name just a few.\u201d<\/p>\n
Don’t miss… <\/strong> Good news for Brit homeowners as EU countries join forces to end Brexit ‘rule’<\/strong><\/p>\n He also highlighted that CEOs and investors around the world are attracted to invest in the UK.<\/p>\n Mr Johnson pointed to EY\u2019s latest attractiveness survey which found the UK remains second in Europe and first for financial services.<\/p>\n Last year a PwC survey saw the UK overtake China to become American CEOs\u2019 favoured growth market.<\/p>\n He said there\u2019s \u201cmore to come\u201d with major investment opportunities on the horizon.<\/p>\n \u201cLater this month, our second Global Investment Summit brings over 200 CEOs to our shores to pledge billions more investment for our most thriving sectors in tech, life sciences and clean growth.\u201d<\/p>\n Mr Johnson hit out amid reports the UK is struggling to attract FDI, with projects down nearly 30% from a peak in 2016-2017.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Figures published by the Department for Business and Trade showed that the UK secured 1,654 FDI projects in the year ending in March 2023, up 4% from 2021-22 but down 27% from 2016-17.<\/p>\n It also showed that the number of projects in many of the UK\u2019s key sectors – including business and consumer services, media and the creative industries, and electronics and communication – was sharply down year-on-year in 2022-2023, and had dropped more than 60% compared with 2016-2017.<\/p>\n Nigel Driffield, professor of international business at Warwick Business School, told the Financial Times that since Brexit the UK is \u201cnot attracting the sorts of investment that are focused on selling and generating products in the richest markets in the world, the [EU] single market\u201d.<\/p>\n Economists warn that high inflation, low economic growth, policy U-turns and political turmoil over the past two years have also had a negative effect on the UK\u2019s appeal to foreign investors.<\/p>\n\n