Software industry calls for more UK Government support
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[March 27, 2024] By
Martin Coulter
LONDON (Reuters) - Britain's government has been urged to provide more
support for the software industry with measures including tax incentives
and talent visas.
More than 120 industry leaders have called for government intervention
to improve conditions for European software companies.
Europe has long struggled to scale up homegrown tech companies as
successfully as the U.S., with many startups forced to seek investment
abroad as they scale up.
A new policy document -- published by industry body Boardwave and seen
by Reuters -- highlights what it calls Europe's "dreadful" track record
of scaling software companies, with one recent study showing only one
software-focused firm, Sage, counted among Britain's top 100
publicly-traded businesses, compared to dozens in the U.S.
Phill Robinson, Boardwave founder and a former executive at software
giant Salesfore, shared the report with Britain's technology minister
Michele Donelan last week, warning that mid-sized software companies had
received little government attention compared to Big Tech firms and
buzzy venture-funded startups.
A spokesperson for the Department of Science and Technology said it had
unlocked billions of pounds to help fund high growth firms, and
encouraged British investors to back the country's most promising
scale-ups.
"We do not agree with this assessment. Our tech sector is booming and
outpacing European competitors at every turn. We consistently lead the
continent, ahead of both France and Germany combined," the spokesperson
told Reuters.
Set up by Robinson in 2022, London-based Boardwave’s 1,300-strong
membership includes software founders, CEOs and other industry leaders
representing almost every country in Europe.
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Illustration shows a laptop with binary codes displayed in front of
the UK flag in this illustration taken, August 19, 2022.
REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration
"A vast part of the tech ecosystem has been disregarded," Robinson
said in an interview. "Software is going to underpin the digital
economy of the future, but it's been neglected."
The recommendations of the white paper, a policy document setting
out proposals for future legislation, include expanding talent visa
schemes in order to attract and retain workers from abroad, and
introducing bigger tax allowances for research and development
spending.
The report calls on governments to explore the creation of a
continent-wide stock exchange, dubbed the "European NASDAQ".
IRIS Software Group, founded in 1978, is the largest third-party tax
filer with the British government, and is used by 21,000 of the
country's accountancy practices. Its CEO Elona Mortimer-Zhika told
Reuters the government could do more to support such companies.
"The world is going to be very different 10 years from now, and we
can either watch it happen, and let the U.S. take the lead again, or
we can support a community of leaders to grow out of the U.K. and
Europe," she said.
Other backers of the campaign include Rishi Khosla, CEO of
Softbank-backed Oaknorth Bank, and Adam Hale, a venture partner at
investment firm Notion Capital, which has previously invested in
startups such as British payments firm GoCardless.
Having presented the report to British officials, Robinson said
Boardwave was pursuing talks with the French and German governments
on how they could support the industry.
(Reporting by Martin Coulter, editing by Ed Osmond)
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