New research from the TaxPayers’ Alliance (TPA) demonstrates conclusively that the Regional Development Agencies (RDAs) have contributed nothing to the economic development of England’s regions. Detailed and comprehensive analysis of regional economic development over the last fifteen years shows that in almost every measure their allotted regions performed better in the seven years before the Agencies were established than in the years since they were set up. The £15.3 billion spent on RDAs since 1999 has been wasted, and the report lays out a clear alternative to these massive quangos that would provide a genuine motor for regional development.
For the full report click Download structure_of_government_3_the_case_for_abolishing_rdas_e.pdf (PDF).
KEY FINDINGS:
RDAs have failed on their three key aims:
RDAs are riddled with waste and excess:
There is a simple, effective alternative: Cut taxes on small businesses
Abolishing the Regional Development Agencies would have no negative impact on the regions, given the RDAs’ failure since 1999. Their 2009-10 budget of £2.19 billion could then be used to pay for a 4p cut in the Small Business Rate of Corporation Tax – from 22 per cent to 18 per cent. Reducing tax on small businesses would create new jobs, boost existing businesses, make life easier for people starting business and give the regions an economic leg-up: exactly what the RDAs were meant to do and have failed to achieve.
Ben Farrugia, Policy Analyst at the TaxPayers’ Alliance, said:
“Regional Development Agencies have failed in their core mission to narrow the gap between the economic performance of England’s regions. At a time when businesses are increasingly over-regulated and over-taxed, RDAs have become a symbol of wasteful bureaucratic excess. They should be abolished before the Government hands them even greater powers.”
Download the full report (PDF).