
UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has been urged to appoint an investment minister who could help the government attract foreign direct investment (FDI), it has been reported.
Citing a report to be published ahead of next week鈥檚 Autumn statement, the indicates that a series of proposals is to be put forward, including the creation of a high-level minister to oversee the new FDI strategy.
According to the FT, the minister is expected to have cabinet rank, but the government is reluctant to introduce another secretary role after reshuffling his team on Monday.
In addition, the report, produced by Lord Richard Harrington, a Conservative peer, is said to suggest creating a cross-government committee chaired by the chancellor and in charge of setting an investment plan to attract FDI in the UK.
The Office for Investment, which is a government unit set to attract significant FDI projects into the UK, would similarly see an increase in powers and would report to the investment minister, one official briefed on the plan told the FT.
According to a parliamentary聽聽published in June, the value of FDI in the UK was -拢51.7bn (-$63.5bn) in 2021, down from 拢34.8bn in 2020. Negative flows occur when more money is going out than coming in, indicating things such as disinvestment, discharges of liabilities, company dividends exceeding recorded income or company operations being at a loss.

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By GlobalDataOverall, the value of inward FDI in the UK was 拢2tn, a slight increase from 2020.
FDI plays a critical role in the levelling up of the country. While FDI levels in the UK have been gradually increasing over the past few years, investors mainly concentrate their investment efforts in a few regions in the UK.
For instance, London accounts for 聽of Britain鈥檚 GDP, yet it receives 34.9% of the country鈥檚 inward greenfield FDI. The UK鈥檚 capital and business hub was home to 411 international company expansions in 2022. Overall, it ranks as the third-largest FDI recipient city, just behind Dubai and Singapore.
In a comment published by聽Investment Monitor聽in May 2021, Neil Rami from West Midlands Growth Company said the UK鈥檚 imbalance in attracting FDI across all regions of the country 鈥渋s reinforcing economic disparities at a heightened time of overseas competition post-Brexit.鈥
Rami highlighted that is due to the 鈥渧arying levels of institutional capacity鈥 to attract inward investment across different regions, adding: 鈥淪ub-nationally, each of the devolved governments has an investment promotion agency 鈥 namely Invest Northern Ireland, Trade & Invest Wales, and Scottish Development International 鈥 complete with discretionary powers, such as the ability to attract FDI projects through grants.鈥
鈥淯ndoubtedly, devolved economic decision-making is integral to future UK prosperity, but the current uneven distribution of IPA autonomy means that some parts of the UK are much better equipped to attract investors than others,鈥 Rami said.