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The Great British Brain-Drain
The American Conservative ^ | 12/12/2025 | Luke Johnson

Posted on 12/13/2025 3:00:58 AM PST by DFG

I am friends with a billionaire property developer who left Britain for good this year. He went to live in a European tax haven because he objects to this country’s 40 percent inheritance tax—one of the most punitive rates in the world. He was born and had lived in London all his life, but his business interests are now global; he no longer recognizes this city, and feels the current Labour government is hostile towards wealth creators. The nation will miss him and his ilk: He reckoned he was frequently one of the top 10 taxpayers in Britain. Overall, the top one percent of earners generate 29 percent of all income tax receipts.

For centuries, Britain and especially London have been a magnet for talent and capital from across the world. Historically the center of the British Empire, and latterly the only financial hub to rival New York, London was a truly global city—full of high earners, a cultural mecca, brilliantly connected to other centers of finance and industry.

But recent times have not been good for London, or indeed Britain. I have lived and worked here for over 40 years, and I cannot recall a period when entrepreneurs and investors have been so demoralized. Everything appears worse: Public spending is approaching 45 percent of GDP, the highest level ever outside wartime; taxation is rising to 39 percent of GDP, the highest ever; regulation is more burdensome than ever; and we suffer the highest commercial energy costs of any developed nation.

The country appears caught in a doom loop of high debt, rising borrowing costs, and stubbornly high inflation. Unemployment is climbing and investment falling; many citizens are fearful of crime and disorder and unhappy with record levels of mostly unskilled legal and illegal immigration from places like Pakistan, Nigeria, India, and Bangladesh.

So an unprecedented exodus of Brits are off to Anglosphere countries like Australia, New Zealand, America, and Canada, as well as to Europe, where they see better opportunities. For the year ending June 2024, total long-term departures from Britain were 693,000, the highest for some years. As a friend recently remarked: “Every waiter in Sydney has an English accent.”

Ambitious young graduates find conditions here tough: sky-high accommodation costs; a weak job market; an all-pervading sense of gloom. The start-up booms of previous eras feel like a fading memory—they are at a 10-year low. Of course times are hard elsewhere too: France, Germany, and Spain are also teetering on the edge of recession. But those nations can at least cling together as part of the EU and the euro, which may provide some shelter from the storm. By contrast, Britain retained an independent currency in the pound sterling, and, in the years since it finally left the bureaucratic embrace of the EU in 2020, it has failed to reap major economic dividends.

Despite pioneering the industrial revolution and modern capitalism, Britain is a semi-socialist state. The current Labour government is deeply unpopular after only 18 months in power, but there is unlikely to be an election until 2029. So we are stuck with an administration where only 10 percent of the MPs have ever worked in the private sector. Consequently, their true mission appears to lie not in raising living standards through growth, but in workers’ rights, the public sector, redistribution, DEI, and all the other tired left-wing cornerstones.

Those who want to get ahead feel disenfranchised. Moving abroad to study, live, and work is mostly easier than ever—digital nomads are embraced by countries like Brazil, Portugal, Spain, and Thailand. People leave for the weather, a lower cost of living, and adventure. If I were in my 20s, I would be on the next plane to California or Texas. I regularly tell my children, aged 20, 19, and 15, that they must consider the option of emigrating.

At every business conference I attend, a key question I’m asked is “Why haven’t you left yet?” I stay because I’m patriotic, my family and friends are here, and because despite its many drawbacks, Britain retains a charm which is hard to match. And yet I have almost given up backing companies here after investing in over 50 ventures since the 1980s. I would prefer to deploy my capital in places with lower taxes, less regulation, and more growth opportunities.

Countries go through cycles, and I’m sad to say we are in a slump. Partly this is a consequence of policies like lockdowns during Covid; partly it is an addiction to public spending, deficits, red tape, and the challenges of an aging population. We probably need a crisis to force the politicians and the citizenry to realize that we need to make dramatic changes—involving tough trade-offs—so that Britain again becomes one of the best places in the world to live and grow a business. Until then, many of our best will flee these shores to live among the bright lights of other countries—a tragedy for us, and a boon for them.

Luke Johnson is the chairman of Gails and a former chairman of the PizzaExpress chain, the Royal Society of Arts and Channel 4. He was a weekly business columnist for the Financial Times, the Sunday Times, and the Sunday Telegraph.


TOPICS: Business/Economy
KEYWORDS: britain; europe; labor; skills

1 posted on 12/13/2025 3:00:58 AM PST by DFG
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To: DFG

When the British citizens decided to disobey the UK Deep State with Brexit, the Deep State decided to take the country away from the citizenry.


2 posted on 12/13/2025 3:10:11 AM PST by RoosterRedux (“Critical thinking is hard; that’s why most people just jump to conclusions.”—Jung (paraphrased))
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To: DFG

Sad


3 posted on 12/13/2025 3:22:30 AM PST by PGalt (Past Peak Civilization?)
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To: DFG

“We probably need a crisis...”

You already have it Jack.


4 posted on 12/13/2025 3:41:41 AM PST by Bonemaker (invictus maneo)
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To: DFG
Great.

London and England is turning into the Detroit and Michigan of the early 21st century ....

5 posted on 12/13/2025 4:06:49 AM PST by Rocky Mountain Wild Turkey ("I have an open mind ... just not so open that my brain falls out onto the floor!!")
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To: DFG
He went to live in a European tax haven because he objects to this country’s [Britain's] 40 percent inheritance tax—one of the most punitive rates in the world.

The same thing is happening within the US, except you don't have to leave the country to escape a punitive state estate tax; you just have to move to a different state within the US.

For example, the Washington state estate tax is 35%, on top of the Federal government's 40%. And Washington state's exclusion amount is only $3 million, much less than the Federal exclusion.

6 posted on 12/13/2025 4:17:35 AM PST by Alvin Diogenes
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To: DFG

In an ironic twist of fate, the colonizers have become the colonized.


7 posted on 12/13/2025 4:24:26 AM PST by Kudsman (Chuck Grassley too old to fight? Lead or get out of the way. Kill the blue slip collaboration.)
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To: DFG

London today. New York tomorrow.


8 posted on 12/13/2025 4:30:17 AM PST by ChessExpert (Infidels of the world unite against the evil that is Islam.)
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To: Alvin Diogenes

Where in Europe are there tax havens here mentions?


9 posted on 12/13/2025 5:52:17 AM PST by KC Burke
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To: KC Burke

Monaco


10 posted on 12/13/2025 7:31:25 AM PST by jimwatx
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To: KC Burke

I don’t know, but ChatGPT suggests that the article might be referring to Monaco, Switzerland, Jersey, Liechtenstein, or possibly Ireland.


11 posted on 12/15/2025 3:59:49 PM PST by Alvin Diogenes
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To: DFG

So an unprecedented exodus of Brits are off to Anglosphere countries like Australia, New Zealand, America, and Canada,


Sounds like the 60s all over again. Thanks to that we got the great “Aussie” bands like AC/DC and The Bee Gees.


12 posted on 12/15/2025 4:03:44 PM PST by dfwgator ("I am Charlie Kirk!")
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