Good policing is the unsung pillar of growth
Market confidence in the City is inseparable from its security, and the police are a core enabler of that security, writes Chris Hayward
For a government focused on economic growth, one truth is clear: prosperity depends on confidence.
Businesses invest, workers commute and global firms choose the UK because they trust our institutions, our stability and our security. That is why the work of the City of London Police matters far beyond the Square Mile.
The City’s police sentry boxes were once symbols of the “ring of steel” introduced when the Square Mile faced an acute terrorist threat.
This week, under the force’s Safer City Streets campaign, those same boxes will be reimagined to showcase the many ways the City police keeps residents, workers and visitors safe. That conversation matters because businesses and policymakers alike should understand the value the force delivers every day.
The City of London police are powering business confidence
The City may be geographically small, but we power the UK economy, supporting 676,000 jobs, 24,000 businesses and generating £109bn in output – the highest of any local authority area.
We are home to major institutions including the Bank of England, London Stock Exchange and Lloyd’s of London. More than a third of the world’s top 500 companies have a presence here.
Market confidence in the Square Mile is inseparable from its security. The City of London Police is a core enabler of that confidence, providing the stability and assurance for firms to invest and operate at scale, and is a key foundation of the City’s attractiveness as a global destination for business. That is particularly important as Lord Hogan-Howe’s review into the future structure of policing gets underway.
The Square Mile remains the only major global financial centre with a dedicated police force of this scale and specialism, tailored to its risk profile and economic role, with strong private sector partnerships. That model works, with overall crime in the City down almost seven per cent year-on-year, including an 11 per cent reduction in theft, and recent hotspot policing has already delivered further reductions in targeted areas.
We support the government’s ambition for more effective policing. Police reform should build on success. The City of London Police plays a vital role in keeping the Square Mile safe, and protecting its resilience and competitiveness as a global financial centre – driving employment, investment, tax revenue and growth that benefits the whole UK.
The fight against fraud
The City police consistently performs at or near the top nationally in crime prevention, victim engagement, emergency call handling and investigative outcomes. It combines local policing with specialist expertise to protect nationally important economic infrastructure, supporting confidence in the wider UK economy. That work increasingly extends beyond physical policing.
Fraud now accounts for 46 per cent of all crime in England and Wales. The City of London Police coordinates the national policing response tackling this threat. Last year, the City police supported 170,000 fraud victims and, working with UK Finance, saved businesses £291m through fraud prevention activity.
This work is strengthened by the irreplaceable partnership between the force and the City of London Corporation. Over the last decade, we have invested almost £700m in policing, security and criminal justice infrastructure.
At the heart of that investment is our landmark Salisbury Square development, which will deliver a new City of London Police headquarters alongside 18 modern courtrooms, providing much-needed capacity for the criminal justice system and strengthening the response to fraud and economic crime. In partnership with the Home Office, we have also invested in the City of London Police to deliver Report Fraud, helping to better protect people and businesses across the country.
At a time when Britain is rightly focused on growth, investment and national resilience, this work matters more than ever. Because protecting the City is not simply about safeguarding one Square Mile – it is about protecting the confidence, security and prosperity on which the UK economy depends.
Chris Hayward is the policy chairman at the City of London Corporation