Brown: China can drive UK recovery

Gordon Brown is to set out his hope that investment from China can drive the economic recovery in Britain.

Gordon Brown greets China s President Hu Jintao at the G20 summit Gordon Brown greets China's President Hu Jintao at the G20 summit [PA]

The Prime Minister is to say he wants to see "thousands" of Chinese firms working in the UK, rather than the current level of around 400.

In a speech to the CBI's annual conference, Mr Brown will also announce he is hosting an international investment conference in London early next year as part of efforts to attract new money.

"Today we have over 400 Chinese companies now operating in Britain," Mr Brown will say. "In our new growth strategy, I want not just hundreds but thousands of Chinese companies in Britain and British companies in China.

"I know that we will soon sign new strategic partnerships with India. Trade relations with the US are strong. So we need an outward-facing Britain, attracting inward investment and sustaining high value added jobs."

Mr Brown is to reiterate that "going for growth" is the best way of tackling huge public debt from the credit crunch and recession, rather than the Tory approach of immediate spending cuts.

"Choking off recovery by turning off the life support for our economies prematurely would be fatal to British jobs, British growth and British prosperity for years," he will say.

"So that's why we will continue with our current plans to support our economy until the private sector recovery is established, and we will ensure that nothing we do will jeopardise that recovery. Our strategy has to be to go for growth, now and in the long term, supporting the economy while ensuring sustainable public finances."

Mr Brown will also insist that European growth is essential to the UK's domestic prospects. And he will bemoan the recent focus on "personalities" as the EU picked out its new president and high representative, saying the real issue was how to create 10 million new jobs across the continent.

The conference in London will also hear from Tory leader David Cameron and Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg.

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