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Conference, over the last ten years
we have learnt that the best way to secure the prosperity and progress
we all want to see is to ensure our economy remains dynamic and
competitive. One that is capable of responding to the challenges and
opportunities of globalization. One that shares opportunity and
prosperity across every part of Britain.
A thriving economy is fundamental to everything we wish to achieve for our country and our people.
We have learnt that Britain's success
as a nation depends on us looking out, not in. Leading in Europe to
seize the opportunities of globalization, not turning away. Building a
modern labour market that is both fair and flexible.
That has been our approach - it has
seen 2.6 million more people in work and each with more rights than
they had in 1997. Growing wealth and personal security, with 600,000
children lifted out of poverty. And rising standards for working
people. Including, from next week, additional rights to paid leave.
A commitment developed by our
National Policy Forum, delivered by our Labour Government, determined
to do right by Britain's hard working families.
No one should be fooled by the
Conservatives. They just don't get the modern world, the future
challenges which it brings and the new solutions which are necessary.
Just read John Redwood's latest plan
for the economy. It's all there. From the people who brought you three
million unemployed, sky high mortgage rates and Black Wednesday.
Yesterday's men with yesterday's solutions taking Britain back to yesterday's problems.
An outdated agenda to hit every business and working family in the country.
For the sake of every man, woman and
business in Britain, we need to make sure the only opportunity David
Cameron has of getting into No 10 will be as the next former Tory
leader popping in for tea with Gordon.
In a time of global change, we must
be the 'country of change'. Capable of advancing fairness at work and
the conditions for full employment.
A business which fails to value and
support its workforce will fail to prosper in the future. The vast
majority of British companies understand this - that is why the CBI are
standing together with the TUC to root out rogue employers and ensure
every single worker in Britain benefits from the improved protection
this Labour government has introduced.
We must find new ways to support our
most vulnerable workers. Some of them migrant workers, prepared to
travel a thousand miles in search of a new life who find themselves
victims of 19th century employment practices. Forcing
workers to take accommodation as part of their employment terms -
confiscating their passports - these scandalous practices have no place
in modern Britain. We must work together to stamp them out.
So I applaud the GMB, UCATT and Unite
for the way they are working with employers and the government in the
vulnerable workers forum to tackle this injustice.
Yet - in a global age where firms
will rightly move across the world to find the best business
environment - we also need to be clear: it's not progressive or
family-friendly if new rules makes firms think twice about taking on
extra workers, or at worst, put people out of work.
It is because we understand that the
right to work itself, to enable people to provide for themselves and
their family, is so fundamental to delivering social justice, that we
want to make Britain the best place in the world to do business.
If globalization means companies can move across the world - I want them to choose to come here and create British jobs.
That is why I made clear at the TUC
that - as we fulfil our agreement at Warwick to seek progress in Europe
on the Agency Workers Directive - we balance a commitment to the
principle of equal treatment with a determination to protect jobs, and
continue giving people the choice that agency work currently offers.
Full
employment remains our goal. And it is within our grasp. We will only
achieve it if we do more to support British companies to grow and
compete in the global market place. That means harnessing the potential
of every region and every community in Britain. That is why we created
the Regional Development Agencies - which the Tories would scrap - that
have helped either create or safeguard more than 600,000 jobs in every
part of Britain.
But we must do more. If we believe
in equality of opportunity, it cannot be right that there are fewer new
business start-ups in the poorest areas of Britain. Enterprise can help
us create a fairer, more progressive society. That is why I am working
with some of Britain's leading entrepreneurs to understand what more we
can do to spread new business creation and growth across every part of
the UK.
A country of change must be capable
of confronting the most fundamental challenge of all - not simply
sustaining economic growth in Britain in the years ahead, but tackling
the immense challenge of climate change. Nothing is more fundamental to
our economy or our society than how we source our energy.
We must now make the transition to a low carbon economy.
Government will play its part.
The Government Gordon Brown leads
will not be among those who say they want to tackle global warming by
moving to low carbon energy sources but then oppose every opportunity
to do so.
The Government Gordon Brown leads
will not shrink from taking the critical decisions on the future
security of our energy supply - including whether to allow investment
in new nuclear power stations.
And the Government Gordon Brown leads will drive forward with delivering a step change in our use of renewable energy.
We must lead at home as well as abroad. A country of change must be prepared to embrace tomorrow's energy sources.
So today I can announce that the Government will now start work on the feasibility of a Severn Barrage.
A truly visionary project,
unparalleled in scale, potentially generating 5 per cent of the UK's
electricity from renewable sources. As we undertake this work, we must
understand the true environmental, social and economic impacts of such
a project.
They are potentially considerable.
But so too is the challenge of
climate change. And we must all have open not closed minds about how
we meet the energy needs of tomorrow.
And with Labour on their side, I know
British business can step up to the challenge and the opportunities of
a low carbon economy in the years ahead. Going green shouldn't mean
going slow. One of the fastest growing investment funds in the City of
London this year promises to be a climate change fund, investing in
industries that combat climate change and help people cope with its
effects.
I want British companies to lead the
way in developing those new technologies and seizing those
opportunities. I want to consider how best we can equip British
companies to maximise the potential of new markets in green business.
A thriving manufacturing sector -
supplementing the blue and white collar jobs of today with a new wave
of 'green collar jobs' tomorrow.
That is the way to secure the future
of our manufacturing base - not turning the clock back, not subsidizing
some jobs today only at the expense of more jobs in the future, but
embracing future markets and new opportunities.
With a new strength of unity and a
common purpose, Britain - under the leadership of Gordon Brown - can be
that country of change.
We can win for Britain.
And British business can win in the global economy.
Ends
Introducing Change across Britain from a position of strength – strength of economy, strength of unity and strength of purpose.