Rachel Reeves is looking for growth on a tight budget. She must focus on creating the conditions that help Britain’s young founders start, survive and scale, while also addressing the root causes driving Britain’s entrepreneur exodus, argues Sean Kohli

Rachel Reeves will be getting no shortage of advice ahead of November’s Budget. The snowballing fiscal black hole has no doubt sucked into its vacuum a more than sufficient proportion of the Treasury’s time.

But buried in all the noise lies a genuine opportunity to make tangible change: change that aligns with the Chancellor’s mission of growth and points to the future rather than the next fiscal sticking plaster. If Reeves really wants to boost Britain’s economic dynamism, she should start with the people already driving it: our young ent

See Full Page