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Business leaders reveal warning letter to Rachel Reeves

Sir Martin Sorrell has joined a list of entrepreneurs warning the Government ‘not to stifle or constrain’ aspiring business founders on the eve of the Budget.

In an open letter, several business leaders including the media tycoon – founder and former boss of media conglomerate WPP – said while the UK ‘has a proud tradition of entrepreneurship’, this was being undermined by escalating costs following tax raids in last year’s Budget. 

Chancellor Rachel Reeves’ decision to hike costs for employers, including National Insurance Contributions, as well as increases in the rates of capital gains tax and the fear of a separate wealth tax, has sparked an exodus of prominent business leaders from the UK in recent months.

In October, Nik Storonsky, the billionaire founder of finance app Revolut, moved his residency from Britain to the United Arab Emirates (UAE). 

And last week Herman Narula, head of tech firm Improbable and the richest self-made British entrepreneur under 40, also announced he was going to the UAE after reports Reeves was considering setting up an ‘exit tax’ for wealthy individuals moving abroad – although she later abandoned the idea.

In the letter, the business bosses said the exodus of entrepreneurs was ‘alarming’ and called on the Government to be more favourable in this year’s Budget.

Warning: Sir Martin Sorrell has joined a list of entrepreneurs warning Reeves not to stifle or constrain aspiring business founders

It also noted that the UK ranked 23rd in the world as the best place to start a business – the sixth year in a row outside the top 20.

‘We need to empower the energy and dynamism of entrepreneurs, not stifle or constrain them,’ it said.

Alongside Sorrell, who heads up media firm S4 Capital, the letter’s signatories included Nick Wheeler, founder of clothing chain Charles Tyrwhitt, John Roberts, the boss of white goods retailer AO World and Steve

Rigby, the head of investment firm Rigby Group. Their intervention, which comes as the founders gather for the UK’s

Global Entrepreneurship Week tomorrow, joins a growing chorus of business leaders calling on the Chancellor not to hit them with even more taxes in her Budget later this month.

In October, a group representing the UK’s retail and hospitality sectors warned that as many as 120,000 jobs could disappear if the Chancellor followed through on plans to hike property taxes on larger shops, pubs and hotels

Open letter to the Government 

We write on the eve of Global Entrepreneurship Week in the UK, as founders who have built and scaled businesses within the UK. 

We take pride in having created jobs and contributed to wealth generation across the country. 

The UK has a proud tradition of entrepreneurship, spawning businesses that have produced products and services that have benefited not only people in the UK but across the world.

This country remains a strong entrepreneurial hub. Our robust financial system, the English language, and favourable time zones offer significant competitive advantages. 

This is reflected in the recent data showing that over 890,000 new businesses were started in the past year alone.

The government plays a crucial role in fostering enterprise. It should be concerned that, in the 2025 Opinium Global Entrepreneurship Index, the UK ranks 23rd globally as the best place to start a business, marking the sixth consecutive year outside the top 20. 

There is alarming evidence that some entrepreneurs are leaving the UK.

Furthermore, last year’s Budget measures, including changes to Capital Gains Tax, Entrepreneur’s Relief, and Employer National Insurance, have increased costs for many entrepreneurs and enterprises.

As the government prepares for this year’s Budget, it must carefully consider the cumulative impact of these policies on entrepreneurs. 

We need to empower the energy and dynamism of entrepreneurs, not stifle or constrain them.

Signed:

Ajaz Ahmed MBE (Founder, Studio.One)

Alex Stephany (Founder & CEO, Beam)

Annoushka Ducas MBE (Founder, Links of London and Annoushka)

Brett Wigdortz OBE (CEO and Co-Founder of Tiney)

Dr Robert D. Kilgour (Founder & CEO, Dow Investments Plc)

Grace Graham (Founder and CEO, Workspa)

Harry Hyman (Founder, Primary Health Properties)

Joanna Jensen (Founder, Childs Farm)

John Cotterell (Founder and CEO, Endava)

John Roberts (Founder and CEO, AO)

Martin Leuw (Serial Entrepreneur at Growth4Good)

Maya Moufarek (Founder, Marketingcube.co)

Nick Wheeler OBE (Founder and Chair, Charles Tyrwhitt)

Sir Martin Sorrell (Founder and Executive Chairman, S4 Capital plc)

Sam Smith (Founder, SuperScalers and finnCap)

Steve Rigby (Co-Chief Executive, Rigby Group plc)

Surinder Arora MBE (Founder and Chairman, Arora Group)

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