The chancellor’s adviser on entrepreneurs has warned that the machinery of government has already been “frozen for six weeks”, and cautioned that the change of prime minister amounts to a “colossal waste of energy” at the very moment British business needs decisions, not delay.
Alex Depledge, the serial entrepreneur appointed by Rachel Reeves as an adviser last June, said she feared Whitehall would remain stalled for many months while a new political leadership beds in.
“We are going to lose six months, at best, probably a year once you start to brief the new ministers coming in. It is just a colossal waste of energy. The British people deserve better,” she told an audience of business leaders at The Times Entrepreneurs Network Live event in London.
Depledge, co-founder and former chief executive of the architecture technology platform Resi, made her comments a day after Sir Keir Starmer resigned as prime minister, clearing the way for Andy Burnham to become the next leader. The future of Reeves as chancellor remains unclear.
The intervention is the latest warning from the business world about the cost of prolonged uncertainty in Westminster, a theme that has dominated boardroom conversation ever since founders and MPs began cautioning that Britain’s tax system is, in effect, telling entrepreneurs to leave.
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