A former Conservative business secretary has criticised his successors for abandoning industrial strategy, including an âunnecessary act of vandalismâ in abolishing a council of industry leaders.
Greg Clark said on Tuesday that the UK needed to be âmore active and deliberateâ in its approach to industry, in testimony to the Commons business and trade committee.
Clark was joined by two of his predecessors, Labourâs Peter Mandelson and the Liberal Democratsâ Vince Cable, in bemoaning the lack of a coherent industrial strategy since 2019.
The US, EU and Chinese governments have in recent years launched expensive efforts to subsidise and promote their domestic advanced industries, amid increasingly open geopolitical rivalry. All three former business secretaries said the UK was failing to keep up, putting British companies at a disadvantage by failing to match rivalsâ industrial strategies and leaving them uncertain over the countryâs long-term plans.
The criticism of the government by a former Tory business secretary highlights the tensions within the Conservative party about how far it should rely on market forces over government intervention.
Clark served as business secretary under the former prime minister Theresa May between 2016 and 2019. He said he tried to build upon work done by Mandelson and Cable to give businesses stability, whereas his successors âabolished the plansâ, resulting in âintermittent industrial strategy over many yearsâ.
He said: âJust at the time â partly driven by security reasons â that countries have looked to make sure that they can guarantee supplies and prosper in the world, we went through a period of abandoning industrial strategy, which I think was a mistake.â
Clark, who still serves as the Conservative MP for Tunbridge Wells, condemned the abolition of the industrial strategy council in 2021, when Kwasi Kwarteng was the business secretary.
The council, launched in 2018, had gathered business leaders for regular meetings to discuss government policy. It had included the former Bank of England chief economist Andy Haldane, the investor and GB News founder Paul Marshall, the former Virgin Money boss Jayne-Anne Gadhia, and the Marks & Spencer chair, Archie Norman.
Clark said: âIt was an unnecessary act of vandalism to destroy a new institution that was doing good work.â
Mandelson, who served as business secretary between 2008 and 2010 under Gordon Brown, criticised the approach of the business minister, Kemi Badenoch, who has said she does not want the government to try âpicking winnersâ. That phrase is closely associated with the former Conservative prime minister Margaret Thatcher.
â[Badenochâs] living in a different rhetorical era, frankly,â said Mandelson. âShe needs to join the 21st century and see what everyone else is doing in this new normal.â
Cable, who served as business minister under the coalition government from 2010 to 2015, said international competition from the likes of China would âonly intensifyâ. However, he warned the UK against trying to match the US, a much larger economy. âThereâs some danger in thinking you can cut and paste the [Joe] Biden model to the UK,â he said.
The Department for Business and Trade was approached for comment.