Birmingham business leaders welcome for regional sovereign wealth fund

EXPLORATORY plans for a West Midlands sovereign wealth fund and ‘Brummie bonds’ to pay for new homes in Birmingham have been welcomed by business leaders.
 
Greater Birmingham Chambers of Commerce said the proposals by new Birmingham City Council leader John Clancy to invest the public sector pension pot in new houses and infrastructure could tap into a ‘potentially great untapped asset.’
 
Henrietta Brealey, Director of Policy for the chamber, said: “Birmingham City Council, like many local authorities, is facing an extremely challenging funding environment. Exploring innovative ways of raising the funds to continue to invest in affordable homes and communities is thoroughly sensible.”
 
Cllr Clancy, who succeeded former leader Sir Albert Bore in November, has said he wants to use the £11 billion West Midlands local government pension fund, the third largest local authority fund in the UK, to invest in Birmingham and the surrounding region.
 
Quoted in the Financial Times, Cllr Clancy said: “I want to anchor those funds better into the region by investing that wealth in the region.
 
“If Government is allowing us to do asset sales to move into revenue, surely it is better to sweat the assets, or to use securitisation of the assets and better utilisation to promote revenue generation. That’s a much better way to go.”
 
Cllr Clancy, who has also raised the prospect of selling ‘Brummie Bonds’ to fund projects, has already discussed his proposals with Greg Clark, Communities and Local Government Minister.
 
The council leader says the UK’s local authorities could create a single asset pot of more than £260 billion if they pooled their pension funds.
 
Ms Brealey added: “Local authority pension funds are, for the most part, a potentially great untapped asset. Naturally, there would need to be stringent checks and balances in place to ensure pension fund members are not disadvantaged or unnecessary risks taken.”

Professor David Bailey, of Aston Business School, said options for using local government pension funds to invest locally were well worth exploring and long overdue in Birmingham.
 
He said Birmingham really needed to build more affordable houses, and there was the potential for pension funds to deliver good returns to their members.

This could also trigger investment in the city at a time when the council itself is under huge financial pressure, he added.
 
The city council believes Birmingham needs around 90,000 new homes over the next 10 to 15 years but the problem it faces is having to trim almost £260m from its budget in the next four years.
 
 

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