Go south, UK think tank tells northern English

Wed Aug 13, 2008 6:12pm BST
 
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By Peter Griffiths

LONDON (Reuters Life!) - Millions of people in northern England should move to the southeast because years of regeneration has failed to improve cities like Liverpool, Hull and Sunderland, a think-tank said on Wednesday.

The right-wing Policy Exchange, often described as British opposition and Conservative party leader David Cameron's "favorite think-tank", said there was no chance of reviving many northern towns that thrived during the industrial era.

Instead of wasting more taxpayer money, the government should help residents to move to more prosperous areas, like London, Oxford and Cambridge.

One Liverpool MP called it "utter nonsense", while another in Leeds said it was "offensive" to write off whole towns.

The report's authors said they had expected the idea to come under fire, but insisted that radical change was needed to help people in declining cities.

"No doubt some people will claim that these proposals are unworkable, unreasonable and perhaps plain barmy," said co-author Tim Leunig, of the London School of Economics.

"But the issue is clear: current regeneration policies are failing the very people they are supposed to be helping and there is no evidence that the trend will be reversed without radical changes."

The report says coastal cities like Liverpool, Hull and Sunderland lost their raison d'etre after the decline of ship-building and ocean-going shipping. They are too big, too isolated and lack jobs.  Continued...

 
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