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Small business owners up and down in the country pack their bags to escape a movement with higher taxes, rising costs and bureaucracy, fresh data has found.

Nearly two out of five owners of small and medium -sized companies (small and medium -sized companies) have either left the UK or are considering an imminent departure, according to a new survey, in a shift that would probably sap Britain of its entrepreneurial spirit.

The majority of those who said they were considering leaving planned to do so within the next two years when a brain drain crisis.

The survey of 200 owners, commissioned by Handelsbanken Wealth & Asset Management, said that about half of the owners said that better economic conditions in other countries appealed to them.

Spain topped the list of companies’ most desirable destinations, followed by the United States and France. Dubai was also seen as a site owner wanted to move to.

SMEs have come under intensive pressure in the midst of rising costs for employment and high taxes.

The increase to the national minimum wage and sweeping changes in the workers’ rights could make devastation of small and medium -sized companies as a third of companies recently investigated by the Federation of Small Businesses (FSB) said they expected the number of staff to be dropped.

Only one in ten small businesses said that they planned to hire more staff, the survey also showed.

The tax burden is predicted to increase to 38.3 percent in 2027, according to Office for budget responsibility (OBR) and beat the heights in previous months. The intensifying load on income makes people more careful about their expenses and suffocating investments.

SME owners’ mass deviation would follow it by dozens of non-judges, who have lost their tax status.

Recently conducted research from the Adam Smith Institute estimated that the emigration of non-judges could cost the British economy over £ 100 billion of about 7,000 individuals who had non-judgment status.

London is already suffering from an outflow of entrepreneurs and investors such as research by Henley & Partners found that only Moscow had lost more ultra -high nets than London over the past 12 years.

Many small and medium -sized companies hope that the Chancellor Rachel Reeve’s latest spring statement would give some relief, but companies were disappointed.

Kevin Fitzgerald, Britain’s CEO of Employment Hero, said the government had failed to support small businesses.

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