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Mayors get the £500m grant pen

2 min read
14:17UTC

DSIT handed seven city-region mayors direct control of the £500m Local Innovation Partnerships Fund on 1 June, moving allocation power from a Whitehall committee to elected regional leaders, with Liverpool first to draw £23.7m.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Innovation spending power moves from Whitehall grant committees to elected regional mayors for the first time.

The Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT) announced on Monday 1 June that seven city-region mayors will gain direct control of Local Innovation Partnerships Fund (LIPF) allocations after the 2027 Spending Review. The mayors of Liverpool City Region, West Yorkshire, South Yorkshire, Greater Manchester, the North East, Greater London and the West Midlands will decide where the money lands in their patches. 1

The fund runs to £500m across 17 English regions for 2026 to 2031, part of an £86bn research-and-development settlement to 2030. Until now a central department ranked bids and rationed grants; the mayors will set regional priorities themselves, on the argument that they read local research strengths better than a London committee does. The first projects went to the University of Liverpool: £23.7m, split £15m to an artificial-intelligence and materials programme and £8.7m to work on AI-designed antimicrobial surfaces.

DSIT had already been steering money northward through other channels. AI Growth Zones directed data-centre capacity toward Scotland and the north of England , and the department's life-sciences manufacturing grants went to four sites outside the Oxford-Cambridge-London triangle in April . Devolving the LIPF moves the decision itself out of Whitehall rather than redistributing money a committee still controls.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The UK government spends billions each year on research grants to universities and companies. Until now, most decisions about where that money goes were made by Whitehall civil servants and UKRI committees, whose members are disproportionately drawn from the Oxford-Cambridge-London university triangle. The £500m Local Innovation Partnerships Fund is being handed to seven city-region mayors. Each mayor will decide how their allocation is spent within their region, within DSIT guidelines. The first £23.7m went to the University of Liverpool for two AI programmes. The practical effect: a mayor with a strong manufacturing base can direct grants to advanced manufacturing research. A mayor whose region has a pharmaceutical cluster can fund life sciences. The allocation no longer flows automatically to the institutions with the most prestigious track record.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

UK innovation concentration is self-reinforcing: Oxford, Cambridge, and London attract talent because research funding goes there; research funding goes there because talent is there. Breaking the cycle requires a structural intervention on the funding side, which individual grant decisions cannot achieve.

The 2027 Spending Review timeline matters for incentives: mayors gain allocation authority only after the Review, giving DSIT two years to monitor whether the current pattern of pre-devolution spending (first £23.7m to Liverpool) establishes a geographic norm before control transfers.

Combined authority mayors (Andy Burnham in Manchester, Tracy Brabin in West Yorkshire) have stronger electoral bases than any individual MP and can absorb the political cost of funding a competitor city's university if the overall pot is managed regionally.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    The seven mayors will have direct institutional incentives to grow their regional university research capacity in the run-up to the 2027 Spending Review, when their formal LIPF authority begins.

    Short term · Reported
  • Risk

    If LIPF funds concentrate in the strongest single institution per region (replicating the RDA capture pattern), the geographic rebalancing rationale does not hold and the policy case for further devolution weakens.

    Medium term · Assessed
  • Opportunity

    For deep-tech companies headquartered outside the Golden Triangle, LIPF-funded university research programmes create a new route to partially-subsidised R&D partnerships that were previously inaccessible.

    Medium term · Assessed
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