Jobs bonanza ahead of Donald Trump’s touchdown in the UK | Politics | News


A new wave of American investment in the UK which will create more than 1,800 jobs has been announced ahead of President Trumpโ€™s state visit to the United Kingdom.

More than ยฃ1.25billion in the nationโ€™s financial services sector will boost employment in Belfast, Edinburgh, London and Manchester.

The pledges to invest in jobs will be especially welcome in the wake of a series of blows to Britainโ€™s pharmaceutical industry. AstraZenecaโ€™s plans to invest ยฃ200million in a Cambridge research site have been paused and drugs giant Merk has abandoned a ยฃ1billion expansion in the UK.

But firms including PayPal, Bank of America, Citi Bank, and S&P Global have committed to investing here. Bank of America will create up to 1,000 new jobs in Belfast.

Citi Group is putting ยฃ1.1billion into its UK operations and BlackRock has a new Edinburgh office this week which will see their โ€œ800-strong footprint nearly doubleโ€. S&P Global is investing more than ยฃ4million in its Manchester offices, generating an extra 200 jobs.

Business and Trade Secretary Peter Kyle said the announcements reinforces the โ€œUKโ€™s position as the worldโ€™s leading investment destinationโ€.

He said: โ€œThese investments reflect the strength of our enduring โ€˜golden corridorโ€™ with one of our closest trading partners, ahead of the US presidential state visit.โ€

Chancellor Rachel Reeves said: โ€œThis commitment from Americaโ€™s leading financial institutions demonstrates the immense potential of the UK economy, our strong relationship with the US and the confidence global investors have in our plan for change, which is making the UK the best place in the world to invest and do business.

โ€œThese investments will create thousands of high-skilled jobs from Belfast to Edinburgh, kickstarting the growth that is essential to putting money in working peopleโ€™s pockets across every part of the United Kingdom.โ€

Jane Fraser, chief executive of Citi Group, said: โ€œThe UK isnโ€™t simply one of our largest markets; it is core to Citiโ€™s foundation as a truly global bank.โ€

Brian Moynihan, the chair and CEO of Bank of America, said: โ€œThe early US-UK trade agreement that the President and the Prime Minister began discussing in February has provided the business community with the certainty and framework it needs to strengthen transatlantic commerce. We are pleased to be able to extend Bank of Americaโ€™s investment in the UK with the creation of a new Belfast operations facility to support our global business, bringing up to 1,000 new opportunities to Northern Ireland.โ€

Larry Fink, Chairman and chief executive of BlackRock, said the asset manager served โ€œover 13 million British people who are saving for retirementโ€.

Leave comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked with *.