Rachel Reeves used her Mais Lecture to set out a stark diagnosis of the British economy: decades of weak investment have left the UK with low productivity, sluggish growth, and constrained public services. Drawing on her experience as the United Kingdom's first woman Chancellor of the Exchequer, she argued that Britain must finally break with the stop–start cycles of austerity and short-termism that have held back both private and public investment.
Investment, Productivity, and the UK's Growth Challenge
The central theme of Reeves's lecture is that the UK's poor productivity performance is rooted in chronically low levels of investment. Without sustained investment, workers lack the modern tools, infrastructure, and technologies they need to be productive. That is true in both the private sector, where firms delay or cancel capital spending, and in the public realm, where underfunded services struggle to keep up with demand.
For much of the last 30 years, the UK has sat near the bottom of the G7 league table for investment as a share of GDP. Reeves argues that this is not an abstract statistic but a lived reality: it means outdated machinery in factories, overcrowded classrooms and lecture halls, crumbling court buildings, and under-resourced hospitals and prisons. When the foundations of the economy are neglected for so long, it becomes harder to generate the productivity growth that underpins rising wages and stronger public finances.
In Reeves's view, an investment-led growth model is the only credible path forward. Investment drives productivity; higher productivity drives growth; and growth, in turn, makes it possible to deliver higher living standards and better public services without resorting to ever-higher taxes on working people. But that chain only holds if governments stick to a long-term strategy rather than lurching between expansion and retrenchment with every political cycle.
Why Stop–Start Policy Undermines Confidence
The lecture is also a critique of what Reeves describes as the UK's habit of stop–start policymaking. Businesses, she notes, plan on decade-long horizons when they are deciding whether to build new plants, invest in research labs, or open new regional offices. If they cannot trust that incentives, regulations, and public investment programmes will survive beyond a single parliament, they will either delay decisions or divert capital elsewhere.
Reeves links this pattern directly to the repeated cycles of austerity and sudden cuts to capital budgets seen in recent years. When governments announce ambitious investment plans but then reverse course at the first sign of fiscal stress, they erode the very confidence they are trying to build. The result is a vicious circle: weak growth worsens the public finances, which then triggers further cuts, which in turn depress growth again.
To break that cycle, Reeves calls for a more predictable framework for both public and private investment. She highlights the role of institutions such as the National Wealth Fund and the British Business Bank in providing long-term capital, alongside strong backing for research and development, artificial intelligence, and clean energy. These arms-length bodies, she suggests, can help depoliticise some investment decisions and ensure continuity across governments.
Public Services Under Pressure and Hard Political Choices
A significant portion of the lecture is devoted to the state of Britain's public services. When the current government came into office, Reeves notes, many systems were already under severe pressure: NHS waiting lists were high, prisons were crowded and overstretched, schools and colleges were dealing with tight budgets, and defence had long-term capability gaps. Against that backdrop, demands for new spending in every area are understandably intense.
Reeves acknowledges that the student loan system is flawed and that many graduates feel the weight of long-term debt. However, she argues that with limited fiscal space, no government can fix every problem at once. Instead, politics is about priorities: deciding where scarce resources can do the most immediate good. For this government, she says, that means focusing first on reducing hospital waiting lists, tackling child poverty, and supporting young people who are not in education, employment, or training.
This does not mean higher education is being ignored entirely. Reeves points to the decision to restore maintenance grants for the poorest students and to invest more in further education, technical colleges, and apprenticeships. Most young people do not go to university, she notes, and a fair system must support those who take vocational routes as well as those who pursue academic degrees. Over time, a stronger, fairer post-16 education system is itself an investment in productivity.
What is the Mais Lecture?
The Mais Lecture is a long-running series of high-profile economic lectures delivered in the City of London, traditionally by Chancellors of the Exchequer, senior policymakers, and leading economists. Hosted in partnership with academic and financial institutions, the lecture is seen as a stage on which Chancellors set out their philosophy of economic management and signal the direction of future policy.
By choosing to focus her Mais Lecture on investment and productivity, Reeves is placing long-term economic renewal at the centre of her tenure. The lecture is not a detailed Budget, but it is intended to frame the choices that will appear in Budgets and spending reviews over the coming years. In that sense, it is both a statement of intent and an invitation to business, workers, and international investors to judge the government on whether it follows through.
Who is Rachel Reeves?
Rachel Reeves is the United Kingdom's Chancellor of the Exchequer and a senior figure in the Labour Party. Before entering Parliament, she worked as an economist at the Bank of England and in the private sector, giving her a technocratic background that shapes her approach to policy. As Chancellor, she has emphasised stability in the public finances, partnership with business, and the importance of long-term investment in skills, infrastructure, and green industries.
Reeves is also a prominent political communicator, often connecting macroeconomic themes like productivity and investment to everyday experiences such as hospital waiting times, overcrowded trains, or the difficulty small businesses face in securing finance. In the Mais Lecture, she combines that economic expertise with an argument about political priorities: that credible long-term investment requires both honesty about trade-offs and a willingness to resist short-term pressures for unfunded promises.
Politics, Priorities, and the Student Loan Debate
The question of student loans illustrates those trade-offs. Many campaigners want to see a fundamental overhaul of the system, from interest rates to repayment thresholds and potential debt forgiveness. Reeves does not dismiss those concerns, but she contends that, in the current fiscal climate, focusing resources on the most urgent social and economic pressures will do more to strengthen the country as a whole.
That includes directing support towards the poorest students through maintenance grants, expanding high-quality apprenticeships, and ensuring that further education colleges have the resources to offer credible routes into skilled work. It also includes targeted investments to reduce child poverty, improve mental health services, and help young people who have fallen out of education or employment to get back on track. In Reeves's argument, these are not just moral imperatives but also economic necessities, because a country that fails its young people will struggle to raise productivity in the long run.
By framing politics as a sequence of hard choices rather than a list of unfunded pledges, Reeves is attempting to draw a contrast with earlier periods of British economic management. The Mais Lecture suggests that, for this Chancellor, a credible plan to raise investment and productivity is ultimately inseparable from a credible plan to target limited resources where they can make the greatest difference.
In closing the lecture, Reeves returns to the core theme: the UK cannot afford another decade of drift. Without a sustained shift towards higher investment, the country risks entrenching low growth, widening inequalities, and permanent strain on its public services. With it, she argues, Britain can unlock higher productivity, better jobs, and the fiscal space needed to rebuild the institutions people rely on.