google.com, pub-8701563775261122, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0
UK

Rachel Reeves to call for rapid AI adoption and deeper ties with EU to boost growth – business live | Business

Introduction: Reeves to call for rapid AI adoption and deeper ties with EU

Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the world economy.

While the UK economy is being buffeted by the energy shock from the Iran war, chancellor Rachel Reeves is hoping that rapid take-up of artificial intelligence and deeper ties with the European Union can deliver growth.

Reeves is due to deliver a big set piece speech in London today – the Mais Lecture, at Bayes Business School. And she’s expected to identify innovation and AI, closer ties with Europe, and regional growth as three big opportunities for economic growth in the UK.

The annual Mais Lecture is a set-piece event for central bank governors, chancellors and prime ministers to set out their economic philosophy.

This will be the chancellor’s second Mais Lecture – in 2024, Reeves warned that the UK was entering an “age of insecurity” marked by stalling growth, stagnant living standards, political turbulence and global shocks.

Two years on, and plenty of global shocks later, Reeves will today pledge that the UK will adopt AI faster than G7 rivals, and announce £2.5bn of funding for AI and quantum computing.

In her lecture at lunchtime today, the chancellor is expected to say:

double quotation mark“In this changing world, Britain is not powerless. We can shape our own future. Our method is stability, investment and reform – through an active and strategic state.

“Today, I am making three big choices on the greatest growth opportunities for Britain in the decade to come: growth in every part of Britain, AI and innovation, and a deeper relationship with the EU.

“Our plan is clear. To build for growth, to champion innovation, and to make Britain the place where the industries of the future are created.”

And on AI, she will argue that Britain “cannot afford to stand still” in a world defined by technological change.

I’ll be at the Bayes Business School later today for full coverage of the lecture.

The agenda

  • 10am GMT: ZEW Economic Sentiment Index

  • 1.30pm GMT: The Mais Lecture 2026, delivered by Rachel Reeves, Chancellor of the Exchequer.

Share

Key events

MPs ask Lloyds how customers saw other users’ data

Parliament’s Treasury Committee are demanding answers from Lloyds Banking Group about the IT glitch which allowed some customers of Lloyds, Halifax and Bank of Scotland to see other users’ transactions.

Dame Meg Hillier, chair of the Committee says the incident appears to be an ‘alarming breach of confidentiality’ (indeed!) and is seeking further clarity on what happened.

In a letter to Lloyds, Dame Meg wants to know how many cutomers were affected by last week’s incident, what information was revealed, and what compensation will be paid.

She asks:

  1. Please can you provide the Committee with an overview of the incident, including the channels (e.g. app, internet banking) and brands that were affected by this incident. This should include a timeline of your response;

  2. A description of the information that has been incorrectly presented to people other than the correct account holder, including whether it was limited to just information about transactions or whether other personal information, including National Insurance numbers, was released;

  3. Whether it is possible to identify those whose information has been incorrectly passed on to others, and if so, how you will communicate with those customers;

  4. The number of customers that have been affected by the incident. This should be separated into the number of people who saw other people’s information, and the number of people whose information was erroneously provided to others, if possible;

  5. What steps you are taking to encourage those who may have taken copies of data to which they were not entitled to delete it;

  6. The amount of compensation that Lloyds Banking Group has so far paid related to this incident and to how many people, and whether Lloyds Banking Group will be proactive in providing compensation to those who may at present not know they have been a victim of this data breach;

  7. When Lloyds Banking Group first informed the Financial Conduct Authority and the Information Commissioner about this breach;

  8. Your initial explanation of the reason for this failure of data protection.

Share

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button