That's a good question, and going on the current government the answer is no.
However the question I would ask is how sustainable is it to ignore the rest of the UK and keep focussing on using London to run practically the whole economy.
If we could see (say) enough network capacity in Nottingham, with the same latency etc as Canary Wharf sees plus a reason (which is going to have to be £$£$£ based) for the financial services sector to move then we'd see a massive hike in income in the middle of the country, with the knock on effect on housing, service sector etc.
That's a good question, and going on the current government the answer is no.
However the question I would ask is how sustainable is it to ignore the rest of the UK and keep focussing on using London to run practically the whole economy.
If we could see (say) enough network capacity in Nottingham, with the same latency etc as Canary Wharf sees plus a reason (which is going to have to be £$£$£ based) for the financial services sector to move then we'd see a massive hike in income in the middle of the country, with the knock on effect on housing, service sector etc.