Episodios

  • What does the "Green wave" mean for local economic development and placemaking?
    Apr 2 2026

    What happens to local economic development when Green Party councillors and (potentially) mayors become a major force in local government? David and Mike explore the “Green wave” – from housing quality and community ownership to a proposed uplift in local government funding tied to net zero and inclusion – and ask whether our current tools and economic plans are ready for it.

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    11 m
  • Is energy now the organising principle for local economic development and placemaking?
    Mar 26 2026

    Is the capacity of our power infrastructure now the majordeterminant of local and regional growth? David and Mike explore how grid constraints, global energy shocks and local political battles over the net zero transition are reshaping regeneration pipelines, spatial strategies and local economic plans. They ask what role Mayoral Strategic Authorities, non -mayoral areas and infrastructure providers should play as energy becomes an organising principle for LED.

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    12 m
  • Team Edinburgh: the growing role of business leadership in shaping modern local economic development
    Mar 19 2026

    Edinburgh is one of the UK’s star city economies. But is success breeding complacency? David and Mike talk to Liz McAreavey, Chief Executive of Edinburgh Chamber of Commerce, about Edinburgh 2030 – a business‑led call to action that aims to turn a patchwork of sector plans into a clear local growth strategy and a stronger “Team Edinburgh” voice. They discuss models for strategic leadership, regional powers, and why investing in foundations like skills, housing, lab space and transport is critical to delivering good, poverty‑reducing growth from a position of strength.

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    42 m
  • Making sense of England's new Local Growth Fund: regional strategy or tactical retreat?
    Mar 12 2026

    The Chancellor has confirmed a new Local Growth Fund (LGF) – a £900m, four‑year capital pot reserved for 11 Mayoral Strategic Authorities (MSAs) in the North and Midlands of England. But the annual average of £225m is around 60% lower than England’s final‑year UK Shared Prosperity Fund allocation, and many places – including London, the South East, most rural counties and non‑mayoral areas – will receive nothing from this scheme. In this Espresso Shot, David and Mike ask whether LGF represents a serious new regional policy – or simply a smaller, more selective successor to the UK Shared Prosperity Fund. They explore the risks of widening disparities within and between regions, the challenges of aligning LGF with integrated settlements, visitor levies, investment zones and other funding pots, and what all this means for capital‑heavy programmes where revenue and community‑level capacity often lag behind. Can MSAs use LGF catalytically – and what are practitioners in non‑funded areas supposed to do next?

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    12 m
  • Pride in Place extended - transformation or tactical top‑up?
    Mar 5 2026

    The UK Government has expanded its Pride in Place (PiP) programme – £20m over 10 years for each selected neighbourhood, with local boards deciding how to spend it on high streets, youth centres, community spaces and events. At the same time, the Independent Commission on Neighbourhoods (ICON) warns that current approaches are too small‑scale and partial to turn around outcomes like crime and economic inactivity by 2030. In this Espresso Shot, David and Mike explore what the PiP extension really means for LED professionals. They discuss the tensions of local authorities being both accountable body and ‘institution‑builder’, the risk of creating neighbourhood structures dependent on town halls, and the absence of an explicit economic foundation or public service integration in the PiP model. What does a genuinely strategic approach to neighbourhood renewal look like – and can PiP be stretched to deliver it?

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    13 m
  • English local government’s perfect storm: what it means for local economic development and placemaking
    Feb 26 2026

    David and Mike unpack the “perfect storm” hitting English local government in early 2026. From the new financial settlement and outcomes framework to 52 reorganisation proposals and reinstated local elections, they explore what this blizzard of change really means for local economic development and placemaking. Is this a moment to despair – or to push for system‑level reform in how Whitehall, local democracy and LED actually work together?

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    14 m
  • From rhetoric to regeneration: rebuilding England’s regional policy
    Feb 19 2026

    What's blocking regional rebalancing and regeneration in England, and could new institutions tackle the north-south divide? In this episode, David and Mike are joined by Peter Hetherington – one of the UK’s most respected commentators on regional affairs, land use and the north south divide. Peter argues that a step‑by‑step dismantling of regional policy has left England without a national regeneration agency, spatial strategy or coherent institutional framework – and he tells LEDC what it would take to rebuild one. From the tensions between Whitehall control and genuine local autonomy, to the crisis in local government finance and the case for taking social care out of council budgets, they explore what “radical but realistic” reform might look like in practice.

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    47 m
  • The Hallett COVID‑19 Inquiry and local economic resilience
    Feb 12 2026

    Six years after the pandemic declaration, the Hallett COVID‑19 Inquiry is uncovering lessons with major implications for local economic development. David and Mike discuss enduring economic scarring, deepened health inequalities, the overlooked importance of social infrastructure, and why future LED strategies must embrace resilience, slack and the agency of hyper‑local communities. A sharp 10‑minute dive into what the Inquiry means for placemaking in 2026.

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    11 m