PM pledges 'new deal' to build post-coronavirus
Boris Johnson is unveiling government plans to soften the economic impact of coronavirus with a promise to "build build build".
Speaking in the West Midlands, the prime minister will say he wants to use the coronavirus crisis "to tackle this country's great unresolved challenges".
As part of a "new deal", Mr Johnson is setting out plans to accelerate £5bn on infrastructure projects.
Labour has called for a "laser-like focus" on preventing job losses.
The prime minister's speech comes
as BBC analysis found that the UK was the hardest hit of all the G7 major industrialised nations by the virus in the weeks leading up to early June.
In April, the UK economy shrunk by a record 20.4% as a result of the spread of coronavirus and the subsequent lockdown measures.
Aiming to emulate the New Deal policies of the depression-era American President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Mr Johnson will say he wants a government that "puts its arms around people at a time of crisis".
In the aftermath of the Wall Street Crash of 1929, President Roosevelt launched one of the largest, most expensive US government programmes which included building schools, hospitals and dams.
In a bid to boost the country's financial outlook, Mr Johnson is pledging to put jobs and infrastructure at the centre of the government's economic growth with a commitment to "build, build, build".
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Image captionUnemployed men queuing for food in depression-era America - the crisis that prompted President Roosevelt's New Deal
Mr Johnson will say he wants to use the coronavirus crisis as an opportunity to "to build the homes, to fix the NHS, to tackle the skills crisis, to mend the indefensible gap in opportunity and productivity and connectivity between the regions of the UK".
More at link.