# Does Andy Burnham Understand Economics? A Critical Look at the Mayor’s Fiscal Vision

# Does Andy Burnham Understand Economics? A Critical Look at the Mayor’s Fiscal Vision

By an Expert Editor, International Policy Review The question sounds almost impertinent: does a successful mayor, a former cabinet minister, understand the basic principles of economics? Yet, when Andy Burnham, the Mayor of Greater Manchester, recently laid out his vision for the region’s finan

Richard J Murphy · · 3 min read ·

By an Expert Editor, International Policy Review

The question sounds almost impertinent: does a successful mayor, a former cabinet minister, understand the basic principles of economics? Yet, when Andy Burnham, the Mayor of Greater Manchester, recently laid out his vision for the region’s financial future, the answer from many economists was a firm “no.” The debate centers not on his intentions—which are widely praised—but on his grasp of cause, effect, and arithmetic.

The Core Claim: A “Fairer” System

Burnham argues that the current system of funding local government in England is broken. He points to a stark disparity: London receives significantly more public investment per person than Greater Manchester. His proposed solution is a radical devolution of fiscal powers. He wants the ability to raise taxes locally, to borrow more freely, and to retain a greater share of the taxes generated within his region.

At first glance, this sounds like common sense. If Manchester creates wealth, shouldn’t Manchester keep more of it? The problem, critics argue, is that Burnham’s logic ignores the fundamental economic reality of redistribution.

The Flaw: Ignoring the National Pool

The United Kingdom operates a system of fiscal transfers. Wealthier regions, principally London and the South East, generate far more in tax revenue than they receive in public spending. Poorer regions, including much of the North, receive more than they contribute. This is not an accident; it is the mechanism that prevents the country from fracturing into a rich south and a poor north.

Burnham’s proposal, if implemented for Manchester alone, would effectively break this system. If Manchester kept all its locally generated tax revenue, the national government would have less money to redistribute to other struggling areas—including parts of Burnham’s own region. As one economist put it, “You cannot have a fairer Manchester without a poorer Liverpool, Newcastle, or Hull.”

The Numbers Don’t Add Up

The mayor’s fiscal plans also suffer from a basic arithmetic problem. He has promised to deliver major infrastructure projects—new transport links, affordable housing, and a net-zero energy grid—while simultaneously cutting council tax for residents. He insists this is possible through “efficiency savings” and “unlocking private investment.”

Yet, independent analyses suggest a significant funding gap. The proposed local tax increases would not cover the cost of the promised investments. The private sector, while willing to invest, requires a clear return. Public infrastructure projects, by their nature, rarely generate direct profits. They require upfront public capital. Without it, the projects stall, and the promises remain empty.

A Political Argument Dressed as Economics

Many observers note that Burnham’s rhetoric is not really about economics. It is about politics. By framing his demands as a fight against a “London-centric” establishment, he positions himself as a champion of the North. This narrative is powerful, but it obscures a difficult truth: the North cannot prosper by isolating itself from the national economy.

A more honest economic approach would acknowledge that some redistribution is necessary. It would recognize that local tax bases are too small to fund major infrastructure alone. And it would accept that borrowing, while useful, must be repaid.

The Verdict: Good Intentions, Weak Foundations

Andy Burnham is not ignorant of economics. He understands the political economy of resentment and the power of localism. But his proposals, as currently articulated, lack a coherent fiscal framework. They rely on a flawed assumption that a region can thrive by keeping its wealth to itself, ignoring the fact that wealth is generated within a national system of shared risk and reward.

For a mayor who aspires to lead a modern, dynamic city-region, the challenge is not to demand a bigger slice of the pie, but to help bake a bigger pie for everyone. Until that lesson is learned, the question of whether he understands economics will remain unanswered—and the answer will likely be “no.”

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