Move dismissed by British Property Federation as 鈥渟mall beer鈥
Chancellor George Osborne today announced a 拢150m fund for large scale projects in Britain鈥檚 main cities financed through Tax Increment Financing (TIF).
The money, through additional government funding and available from 2013鈥14, will be allocated through a competition due to be announced in the next few months.
TIF, a system widely used in the United States, enables local authorities to borrow against future growth in business rates.
However, Peter Cosmetatos, director of finance at the British Property Federation, said: 鈥溌150m seems like very small beer after years of preparatory work and the hopes and expectations that have built up around the country for a new instrument that could, if designed well, unleash investment and growth.
鈥淲hat isn鈥檛 clear is whether the 拢150m referred to represents the capital sum which can be invested in enabling infrastructure, or the element of total annual business rates revenues that the government is happy to see funding the annual financing cost of such investment. If it鈥檚 the latter, that would mean more could be invested in infrastructure.
鈥淚t鈥檚 also disappointing that, 18 months after TIF was announced as government policy, we have yet to see any detail about how it will work, and we are only promised details 鈥渋n the coming months鈥 about how the government will decide which schemes get the go-ahead.鈥
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