Why U.K. Chancellor Rachel Reeves should approach capital gains tax decisions like a venture capitalist
Briefly

In September, U.K. capital gains tax (CGT) receipts hit their highest monthly level since 2008. As the country awaits the imminent Autumn Budget, business owners and investors are sounding the alarm as CGT is expected to rise above 28% for the first time.
The U.K. has historically been a magnet for entrepreneurs, drawing them in with its unrivaled pools of capital and talent and enticing them to stay through schemes like the Enterprise Investment Schemes (EIS) and Seed Enterprise Investment Schemes (SEIS), which incentivize investment in early-stage U.K. businesses by offering substantial tax relief.
Despite these traditional strengths, the British business ecosystem suffers from critical blind spots in the business support lifecycle. As companies scale beyond early-stage tax relief schemes, founders face a stark cliff edge as government support abruptly drops.
Today, top talent has unprecedented mobility. They can start a business, recruit, and operate almost anywhere in the world. My firm, Antler, with 27 offices internationally, tries to reinforce this 'build anywhere' mindset by providing global capital, internationalized assistance, and access to top talent in most major markets.
Read at Fortune Europe
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