Except if you are, for example Turkish, in which case you can acquire a 'golden visa', by putting down a varying amount of money into a business. The government will then assist you with reducing business rates and other start-up costs. If things don't go too well, you can get a mate to bypass the electricity meter and then grow cannabis in the upstairs part of the building. In the case of by-passing the meter, you tell the police that it was your partner who did it, and you were not aware of it, so you are allowed to re-open. All this explains the proliferation of Turkish barbers and takeaways (other nationalities are available), throughout the country. Both of these events took place within a 3-mile radius of my house in a rural area of Northamptonshire. I shudder to think how much of this is going on around the country. Welcome to Britain 2024!Fox3WheresMyBanana wrote: ↑Sat Feb 24, 2024 11:29 amNo.
Government taxes and regulations make it, in general, impossible for a small business to make a profit. Certainly for start-ups in small towns.
And that it turn makes it impossible for Government to run a balanced budget.
So they will bankrupt the fiat currency, all of them, to stay in power a little longer.
This is why we now have unfixable inflation everywhere.
And massive supply chain problems.
https://www.gov.uk/indefinite-leave-to- ... bal-talent
Failure rates are high for the UK Innovator Visa and reached 35% in Quarter 1 of 2022. Admittedly some nations have faced higher rejection rates than others such as Pakistan and Iran (my italics) while others including South Africa, Canada, USA and Hong Kong have seen far greater success.