Next week's budget will include the announcement of five new freeports by Downing Street as part of its endeavor to stimulate economic growth.
In addition to an investment zone in the East Midlands, ministers will outline proposals to create five new low-tax zones where companies will receive tax benefits like reduced tariffs and customs.
Freeports operated without great impact in the UK between 1984 and 2012, when they were phased out by David Cameron. Rishi Sunak re-established them while he was chancellor to try to offset post-Brexit tariffs and create the conditions for long-term stable investment. Since 2021, eight have been opened in England and two each in Scotland and Wales.
Keir Starmer said the freeports being announced next week would âhave this governmentâs stamp on themâ despite being a policy inherited from the Tories.
Starmer and Angela Rayner have identified planning reforms and devolution as ways to drive growth in parts of the country that have suffered underinvestment.
Ministers are expected to announce changes to the freeports model, including improving oversight from local councils and mayors and aligning them with the governmentâs industrial strategy.
The prime ministerâs press secretary said the aim was to promote âgrowth across the entire countryâ and âthatâs why so much of it is focused on our relationship with devolved administrationsâ.
Starmer said: âEconomic growth is the number one mission of this government, measured in living standards going up, and people feeling better off, in well paid jobs across every part of the United Kingdom. Targeted programmes that attract investment and generate jobs and growth for local people, underpinned by our industrial strategy, and the economic stability my government brings, will turbocharge the potential of areas across the country.
âI have always said I will look at whatever will deliver for working people, with no ideological lens. So yes, freeports were a scheme we inherited, but when combined with Labourâs laser focus on growth generated from the ground up, we will maximise their potential. My government is rewiring how and where growth is generated to secure investment and create good jobs for working people.â
Critics of freeports say there is little evidence they attract new investment or help the economy. The Office for Budget Responsibility said in 2021 that tax breaks in Englandâs freeports would cost the government ÂŁ50m a year and that their impact on GDP was likely to be so small it would be âdifficult to discern even in retrospectâ.
Trade unions have in the past called for clarity on how freeports impact on workersâ and union rights. The prime ministerâs spokesperson said that âwhere necessary the government will make improvements to the freeport programmeâ and that the employment rights bill would help safeguard workersâ rights.