UUP urge Brown to rethink Stormont package

Chancellor Gordon Brown was urged today to radically rethink his approach to the Northern Ireland economy.

Chancellor Gordon Brown was urged today to radically rethink his approach to the Northern Ireland economy.

Ulster Unionist leader Sir Reg Empey said after a meeting with business leaders there was a feeling that Mr Brown's £50 billion package over 10 years for a future Stormont government was not radical enough to breathe new life into the North's economy.

The former Economy Minister observed: "There is widespread disappointment in the business community with the Chancellor's package. "The verdict of Northern Ireland's wealth creators on the Chancellor's failure to offer a new direction for the Northern Ireland economy must be heeded.

"My party colleagues and I outlined to business leaders and organisations the Ulster Unionist Party's view that the Chancellor's package unfortunately fails to signal the required strategic shift to promote a vibrant, competitive knowledge-based regional economy.

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"Provision for increased infrastructure investment, incentives for research and development investment and increased productivity, and the growth of high-quality, skilled jobs necessitate a step-change in Government policy. The Chancellor's package simply fails to deliver this."

Unionists and nationalists have been arguing for some time there needs to be a peace dividend from London and Dublin for a new Stormont Executive to spend on roads, the rail network, telecommunications, education and health if it is to have any success in attracting inward investors to Northern Ireland.

Following a meeting last Wednesday with Democratic Unionist, Sinn Fein, Ulster Unionist, SDLP and cross community Alliance Party leaders, Mr Brown outlined his vision of a package but also warned them it would be withdrawn if they failed to revive power sharing by March 26th next year.