Key Takeaways
The UK Labour Party has been consistently ahead in
the polls for the last 18 months. Given the current
economic and political environment, our base case is
that it forms the next government.
This is the first in a series of Insights considering what
a potential Labour government would do, and what this
would mean for the economy and markets.
We start with Labour’s approach to green industrial
policy, where its policy platform is most developed.
Influenced by the approach of the Democrats in the
US, Labour’s strategy seeks to leverage government
investments and subsidies for decarbonisation and
green energy to crowd-in wider private sector
investment in domestic manufacturing.
The Party has said it will spend £28 billion per year on
green projects by the middle of the next parliamentary
term. While this is likely to be revised down in time, it
would still represent a huge increase in spending
compared to the roughly £8 billion spent per year now.
Labour’s ambition comes with risks. Most notably, the
breadth and speed with which it hopes to act will leave
it vulnerable to driving funding towards inefficient or
unviable emerging technologies. Without further
amendments to its plans, Labour is unlikely to be able
to deliver all its commitments on time.
Nevertheless, opportunities for private sector
investment in renewable energy and decarbonisation
projects will likely increase alongside greater
government investment.