Britain is lagging behind international peers like the US
and Canada when it comes to female entrepreneurship and is losing out on an
economic boost of £1 billion per year as a result, according to research.
The proportion of working women starting their own business
in the UK nearly doubled to 7.1% from 3.7% between 2009 and 2012, but has
fallen each year to total only 4.7% in 2015, a report by NatWest and
Development Economics found.
If that rate of growth had been sustained to reach the same
level as Canada at 13.5%, Britain’s economy would have benefited from an extra
£1.35 billion in 2015, the report claims.
The US, Netherlands, Singapore and Sweden all have a higher
number of female entrepreneurs than Britain, in proportion to the number of
working women, at 9.2%, 7.3%, 7.2%, and 4.9%, respectively.
Development Economics managing director Steve Lucas said:
“The UK still lags behind the likes of the US and Canada, which have a much
higher proportion of female entrepreneurs.
“In these nations, the celebration of entrepreneurial
qualities is something that is deeply embedded, whereas the UK has a reputation
for being more risk-averse and in some cases having excessive red tape that
might constrain entrepreneurship.
“If the UK is able to bolster its efforts to help female
entrepreneurs, the opportunity for further economic growth is significant.”
Female entrepreneurs – which the report says are “central to
the UK economy” – set up nearly 1.2 million businesses in the UK between 2002
and 2015.
But the study found that women only launched a third of the
new businesses set up in 2015, with men setting up the rest.
Compiled by Desmond
Source:www.newsandstar.co.uk
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