Industry Act 1972

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Long titleAn Act to authorise grants towards expenditure on the provision of assets for industry in certain regions in Great Britain, to authorise the provision of financial assistance for industry in those regions or elsewhere, and provisions about credits and grants for the building of ships and of offshore installations, to amend the Local Employment Act 1972 and to make temporary provision as to one of the areas to be treated as a development area under that Act; and for connected purposes.
Royal assent9 August 1972
Repeals/revokes
Industry Act 1972
Act of Parliament
Long titleAn Act to authorise grants towards expenditure on the provision of assets for industry in certain regions in Great Britain, to authorise the provision of financial assistance for industry in those regions or elsewhere, and provisions about credits and grants for the building of ships and of offshore installations, to amend the Local Employment Act 1972 and to make temporary provision as to one of the areas to be treated as a development area under that Act; and for connected purposes.
Citation1972 c. 63
Dates
Royal assent9 August 1972
Other legislation
Repeals/revokes
Amended byIndustry Act 1975
Status: Amended
Text of statute as originally enacted
Text of the Industry Act 1972 as in force today (including any amendments) within the United Kingdom, from legislation.gov.uk.

The Industry Act 1972 (c. 63) was an act of the British Parliament passed by Edward Heath's Conservative government.

The act, in the words of Treasury civil servant Leo Pliatzky, was intended to "strengthen our industrial capacity so as to take advantage of membership of the Common Market" which Britain would join in 1973.[1]

The framework of the act was designed by a committee chaired by civil servant William Armstrong in secrecy.

Contents

Reaction

Notes

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI