The People's Chamber
ISSUE 80
JUN 19-25, 2026
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Department for Business and Trade

Negotiates trade deals, sets business regulation, and explains to anyone who'll listen why Britain is open for business. Now slightly busier than usual.

The Rt Hon Peter Kyle MP

The Rt Hon Peter Kyle MP

President of the Board of Trade

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The Department for Business and Trade is the latest name for a department that has been reorganised, renamed and restructured more than any other in Whitehall. Since 2007 alone it has been the Department for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform, the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills, the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy, and now the Department for Business and Trade. Four names in 16 years. Each reorganisation promised clearer focus. Each produced a new letterhead and the same underlying problems.

Eleven Secretaries of State have overseen the business brief since 2010: Vince Cable, Sajid Javid, Greg Clark, Andrea Leadsom, Alok Sharma, Kwasi Kwarteng, Jacob Rees-Mogg (49 days), Grant Shapps, Kemi Badenoch, Jonathan Reynolds and Peter Kyle. The department that is supposed to provide stability, certainty and strategic direction for British business has itself been the most unstable department in government.

The numbers explain why stability matters. UK firms invest just 11.1 percent of GDP, the second lowest rate in the G7. Only Canada invests less. France invests 12.7 percent. Germany invests 12 percent. Japan invests 18.2 percent. British workers have access to 38 percent fewer machines, buildings, robots and intellectual property per hour worked than workers in comparable economies. In manufacturing, that capital gap widens to 47 percent. A country that has spent decades talking about productivity, competitiveness and growth has systematically underinvested in the tools its workers need to deliver them.

Whole economy investment reached 18.2 percent of GDP in early 2025, the lowest in the G7. That is not a new problem. It is a structural feature of the British economy that no business department, under any name, has reversed. Productivity growth averaged 0.6 percent from 2010 to 2019, the largest fall of any G7 nation. If productivity had kept growing at its earlier pace, GDP per capita would have been approximately £15,000 higher in 2024. The department responsible for business competitiveness presided over the weakest investment and productivity performance in the developed world.

Trade tells its own story. The UK ran an overall trade deficit of £39 billion in 2025: a £242 billion deficit in goods partly offset by a £203 billion surplus in services. The deficit with the EU was £89 billion. The surplus with non EU countries was £50 billion. The government has struck three trade deals since 2024, with the United States, India and the EU. The India deal alone could increase GDP by over 0.1 percent in the long term. DBT has concluded three and paused two of the nine agreements it was negotiating. These are significant steps. They also arrive years after Brexit was supposed to unlock a new era of global trade, during which the UK's share of world goods exports has continued to decline.

The department's most dramatic recent intervention was in British Steel's Scunthorpe steelworks, where it led government action to prevent irreversible closure. That saved jobs and preserved capability. It also illustrated the reactive nature of British industrial policy: waiting until a factory is about to close before intervening, rather than creating conditions that prevent the crisis.

The department published the UK's Trade Strategy in June 2025, setting out what it called a "pragmatic" approach to surviving turbulence in a changing world. It identifies eight growth driving sectors for long term support. Whether that strategy outlasts the current Secretary of State, given the department's history, is the question every business owner reading it will silently ask.

The Department for Business and Trade can point to genuine strengths. Britain remains the world's sixth largest economy. The services sector is internationally competitive. The country attracts substantial foreign investment. GDP grew 1.5 percent in 2025, making Britain the second fastest growing G7 economy. Real wages have risen more than in the decade from 2010. These are not trivial achievements.

What concerns British business is the structural underperformance beneath the headlines. Investment is the second lowest in the G7. The capital gap is 38 percent. Manufacturing capital intensity is 47 percent below peers. The trade deficit in goods is £242 billion. The department has been renamed four times and led by eleven different people in 16 years. Energy costs for industry are among the highest in the developed world. Every Industrial Strategy, every growth plan and every export drive has promised to fix these numbers. The numbers have not moved. A department that cannot keep its own name for more than four years is asking businesses to trust it with a decade long economic strategy. The public and the business community will judge it by whether this time, finally, the strategy survives long enough to produce results.

Budget · 2025/26

£2.8bn
Resource DEL £1.8bn · Capital DEL £1.0bn

Industrial strategy, trade policy and trade negotiations, business support schemes, the Post Office, the Insolvency Service and sectoral subsidies for steel, automotive and semiconductors. The £2.5 billion British Steel arrangement in 2025/26 sits inside this line. Smaller than its political weight suggests because most of the levers it pulls, R&D, energy and planning, are owned by other departments.

Agencies & Arm's Length Bodies (20)

  • British Hallmarking Council (BHC)

    We supervise the hallmarking activities of the 4 UK Assay Offices to ensure there is adequate provision of hallmarking within the UK.

  • Central Arbitration Committee (CAC)

    We encourage fair and efficient arrangements in the workplace by resolving collective disputes in England, Scotland and Wales, either by voluntary agreement or, if necessary, through a legal decision.

  • Certification Officer

    The Certification Officer (CO) and his team ensure that trade unions and employers’ associations carry out their statutory duties. Certification Officer works with the Department for Business and Trade .

  • Companies House

    We incorporate and dissolve limited companies. We register company information and make it available to the public. Companies House is an executive agency, sponsored by the Department for Business and Trade .

  • Competition and Markets Authority (CMA)

    We promote competition and protect consumers with a clear end goal – economic growth and household prosperity. CMA is a non ministerial department.

  • Export Control Joint Unit (ECJU)

    The Export Control Joint Unit (ECJU) administers the UK’s system of export controls and licensing for military and dual use items. ECJU is part of the Department for Business and Trade .

  • Fair Work Agency (FWA)

    The Fair Work Agency acts to protect workers, support fair competition and ensure employers comply with the law. FWA is an executive agency, sponsored by the Department for Business and Trade .

  • Groceries Code Adjudicator (GCA)

    The Groceries Code Adjudicator is responsible for regulating the relationships between the UK’s largest grocery retailers and their direct suppliers by encouraging, monitoring and enforcing compliance with the Groceries…

  • Low Pay Commission (LPC)

    The Low Pay Commission is an independent body that advises the government about the National Living Wage and the National Minimum Wage.

  • Office for Investment

    The Office for Investment (OfI) is a joint unit of HM Treasury, the Department for Business and Trade, and the Prime Minister’s Office, 10 Downing Street.

  • Office for Product Safety and Standards

    Our primary purpose is to protect people and places from product related harm, ensuring consumers and businesses can buy and sell products with confidence.

  • Office for the Pay Review Bodies (OPRB)

    The Office for the Pay Review Bodies provides an independent secretariat to 8 Pay Review Bodies which make recommendations impacting 2.5 million workers – around 45% of public sector staff – and a pay bill of £100…

  • Office of the Regulator of Community Interest Companies (CIC Regulator)

    The Office of the Regulator of Community Interest Companies decides whether an organisation is eligible to become, or continue to be, a community interest company (CIC).

  • Office of Trade Sanctions Implementation (OTSI)

    The Office of Trade Sanctions Implementation (OTSI), part of the Department for Business and Trade, was launched in October 2024.

  • Regulatory Policy Committee (RPC)

    We provide independent expert advice to the UK government to create better regulation, reduce unnecessary burdens on business and support economic growth.

  • Small Business Commissioner (SBC)

    We ensure fair payment practices for Britain’s 5.5 million small businesses, and support them in resolving their payment disputes with larger businesses.

  • The Insolvency Service

    We are a government agency that helps to deliver economic confidence by supporting those in financial distress, tackling financial wrongdoing and maximising returns to creditors.

  • Trade Remedies Authority

    The Trade Remedies Authority exists to defend the UK against unfair international trade practices. We investigate whether new trade remedies are needed to prevent injury to UK industries caused by unfair trading…

  • UK Defence and Security Exports (UKDSE)

    We help UK defence, cyber and physical security companies to export, and help overseas defence companies invest in the UK. UKDSE is part of the Department for Business and Trade .

  • UK National Contact Point (UK NCP)

    We are responsible for promoting the OECD guidelines for multinational enterprises on responsible business conduct and for operating the complaints mechanism set out in the guidelines.

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