Today, the Chancellor Rachel Reeves delivered the Autumn Budget. In short, it entails more spending, more tax rises and more borrowing. Growth forecasts from the Office for Budget Responsibility, meanwhile, are anaemic. We issued the snap reaction to the Budget not long after she finished addressing the Commons, and we’ll be digging into things in more depth later in the week — so stay tuned by subscribing to our Friday newsletter if you aren’t already.
Capital Gains Tax and Business Asset Disposal Relief (BADR)
Philip Salter, Founder of The Entrepreneurs Network, said:
“Entrepreneurs will be somewhat relieved that the Capital Gains Tax (CGT) rate wasn’t hiked as high as many feared. Similarly, there were rumours that Business Asset Disposal Relief (BADR) would be scrapped, so the worst-case scenario was avoided. Nevertheless, BADR will still be ratcheted up over the coming years, meaning Britain will become an increasingly unattractive place to both start and exit a company.
We know that many entrepreneurs are already looking to move their business from the UK – and this only makes that move more compelling. This is why 1,250 of the UK’s most ambitious entrepreneurs signed our letter against such changes.
It’s not just entrepreneurs who will be impacted. Many fledgling startups give employees stock options or shares as part of their compensation package as they cannot compete with the higher salaries offered by established big corporates. Today’s changes will reduce this incentive, making it even harder for startups to attract the talent they need to scale, while denying workers the chance to own a piece of Britain’s growing companies.
Instead of hiking BADR, the Treasury should have retargeted the relief at founders who are scaling businesses, and have made it unlimited to incentivise the world’s best entrepreneurs to start, scale and sell multiple businesses in Britain.”
Employer National Insurance Contributions
Eamonn Ives, Research Director of The Entrepreneurs Network, said:
“In a move that is expected to raise around £25 billion a year, employer National Insurance Contributions will increase by 1.2 percentage points to a rate of 15% and the threshold at which they start paying it was cut from £9,100 to £5,000.
The Chancellor might insist that this is not a tax on working people, but while it is true that it is employers who will bear the ‘legal incidence’ of the tax rise, economic evidence makes clear that increases like this are ultimately factored into lower wages for workers.
In short, and coupled with other measures such as the rise in the National Minimum Wage, it will become more expensive to take on staff, especially for those entrepreneurs employing people at the lower end of the earnings ladder. We shouldn’t be surprised if firms rethink hiring plans or water down pay rises.”
Business Rates reform
Eamonn Ives, Research Director of The Entrepreneurs Network, said:
“The promise to transform Business Rates will be watched closely by Britain’s entrepreneurs, who recognise them as one of the biggest impediments to growth. Our current system punishes those who improve their premises and the infrequency of revaluations means that rates can become out of step with market conditions.
Yet some of the measures announced today – such as a freeze for the small business multiplier and the introduction of a specific sectoral multiplier – only add further complexity to Business Rates. A proper overhaul, as we have called for in the past, would instead see the underlying land values taxed, and we encourage the Government to be bold as it develops its thinking on this policy.”
R&D spending
Anastasia Bektimirova, Researcher at The Entrepreneurs Network, said:
“At a time when the public finances are so stretched, the protection of funding for R&D spending and tax reliefs should be welcomed by Britain’s innovators. Only by bringing forward more innovation can we grow the economy in the long run and develop solutions to improving public services.
What starts as basic research can then spin out from universities as innovative companies. It is very important to protect that, so the £6.1 billion for core research is particularly positive, especially with little fiscal room on spending.
It would be a mistake to prematurely interpret the silence on any major AI-related announcements as a lack of ambition. The Budget has made it clear that the AI Opportunities Action Plan will be published soon, which will set out the Government’s plans – and should match the ambitions of the sector.”
On the new Life Sciences Innovative Manufacturing Fund:
“The new Life Sciences Innovative Manufacturing Fund is a welcome intervention into fundamentals that will help keep more life sciences innovation in the UK as it is scaling. Limited manufacturing infrastructure is often cited as a critical factor prompting innovators to relocate.”
On the new R&D Missions Programme:
“A new R&D Missions Programme shows that, as expected, the five missions will be an important framing for innovators trying to make a compelling case when engaging with the Government. It will be particularly interesting to see the details of how the growth mission will be framed here, as much of R&D work naturally fits it already.”