Vince Cable 'Trying To Hide George Osborne's Abject Failure' On Exports

Cable 'Trying To Hide Osborne's Abject Failure'
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(left to right) Business secretary Lord Mandelson, Shadow Chancellor George Osborne and Liberal Democrat Treasury spokesman Vince Cable at Birmingham University, during the third and final live leaders' election debate.
Lewis Whyld/PA Archive

Vince Cable has been accused of "trying to hide the abject failure" of George Osborne's flagship schemes which are supposed to help British businesses export.

This comes after the Huffington Post UK revealed earlier this month that the Chancellor's £3 billion Direct Lending Facility (DLF) unveiled last autumn and operational since this March, has only helped one firm - the construction giant Carillion - trade overseas.

Under questioning from MPs on Thursday, the business secretary mocked such findings as "horribly out of date", insisting that "dozens of companies are now benefiting from that new suite of credit facilities".

However, when asked who these other firms were, Cable refused to name them, sparking suggestions that he is now trying to "spin his government’s poor record".

HuffPostUK has repeatedly asked UK Export Finance, the government agency that offers insurance and bank guarantees to exporters, to confirm if the DLF had still only helped one business, as it stated just three weeks ago, but their spokeswoman refused to comment.

Labour MP Heidi Alexander told the Huffington Post UK: “Vince Cable has let down British business, but now he is adding insult to injury by trying to hide the abject failure of the government’s export finance schemes.

“The government’s Export Enterprise Finance Guarantee had to be dropped after only helping a small handful of firms. And recently, during Export Week, we learned that two of the government’s flagship schemes have failed to get off the ground. Tellingly Vince Cable wasn’t able to name any businesses which have received help through the Direct Lending Facility beyond the single firm which is currently taking part in the scheme.

“Perhaps Vince Cable should focus less trying to spin his government’s poor record and more time working on behalf of British business.”

The sluggish progress of the DLF, which aims to provide loans to foreign buyers of goods and services from British companies, will be especially humiliating as George Osborne has led the government's export drive, promising to "raise from the ruins of an economy built on debt a new, balanced economy where we save, invest and export."

He has also pledged to double British exports to £1 trillion by the end of the decade, a target which looks increasingly harder to fulfill.

Previously UKEF told HuffPostUK that only one firm - Carillion - had been helped by the DLF scheme, stating: "UKEF has supported one export contract so far under the DLF" and that "Carillion is indeed the only one who has closed a deal so far".

Osborne tried to revitalize the DLF scheme this year when he unveiled changes in this year's Budget to make it "more accessible to small businesses" and help them “realise their export potential”.

The DLF provided £34 million to help Carillion secure a £75 million contract with the Dubai World Trade Centre, while UKEF previously told HuffPostUK that a further 25 firms have expressed an interest in using the scheme to help secure a deal overseas.

The government agency also indicated it had identified 39 potential contracts that range in size from £5 million to £500 million that it could support as evidence of "the export ambitions of firms of all sizes."

A Business department spokesman told HuffPostUK: “The government is committed to providing UK exporters with increased support and that is why we are tripling the number of international trade advisors for medium sized businesses and setting up British Business Centres in high growth export markets across the world.

"Last year alone UKTI helped more than 40,000 small and medium businesses and is on course to double the number of companies assisted compared to only 4 years ago.

“Currently there are nearly 40 companies who are in discussion with UKEF about using the Direct Lending Facility to help win export orders. They are benefiting from being able to offer their customers a competitive means of financing potential orders. However, due to commercial sensitivities, UKEF does not disclose the identities of exporters involved in potential transactions.”