The UK has slipped seven places in a league table designed to measure the quality of entrepreneurship.
The latest National Entrepreneurship Context Index, released by Global Entrepreneurship Monitor, puts the UK 25th out of 51 countries.
The UK’s index score decreased from 4.9 in 2021 to 4.7 and is below that of other comparable economies such as the USA (5.2), France (5.1), and Germany (5.1).
GEM defines the entrepreneurial context of a particular economy in terms of 13 different characteristics, labelled the Entrepreneurship Framework Conditions (EFCs). The NECI results are based on the scores of the Framework Conditions for each of the participating 51 economies.
At least 36 experts are selected to assess statements that make up the scores that can be compared across economies.
In the period 2021 to 2022, nine EFC scores worsened, led by Physical Infrastructure and Ease of Entry: Burdens and Regulation, both directly related to the post-Brexit, post-pandemic turmoil.
However, experts saw an improvement in government entrepreneurship programmes, which could be partially driven by the deployment of Help to Grow.
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak launched the Help to Grow: Management scheme back in 2021 at Aston Business School whilst he was Chancellor. But it was found that there is still much to be done, with the score of 4.66 still below the sufficiency level.
Similarly, on the degree of recovery towards pre-pandemic levels of activity in companies, the UK’s score suggests sufficiency (5.57). It is still considerably lower than in benchmark countries (6.36 in the USA, 6.34 in France, and 5.79 in Germany).
The UK compares relatively well in terms of the attainment of Sustainable Development Goals. For example, experts perceive the degree of priority assigned to good practices of social responsibility by UK entrepreneurs as 5.83 out of 10 which is higher than in the US (5.64) and in Germany (5.61), although lower than in France (6.34).
“It is not surprising that framework scores worsened over the year given chaotic trading conditions and supply chain blockages, as the implications of Brexit continued to be multiplied by the aftermath of the pandemic and compounded by rising energy prices,” said Professor Mark Hart, lead of the GEM UK team and professor of Small Business & Entrepreneurship at Aston Business School in Birmingham.
“An economy once lauded for its world-leading financial markets was assessed as insufficient in both the level of (4.87), and access to (4.05), entrepreneurial finance, alongside insufficient entrepreneurial education at all levels, and diminishing government policy support.
“Despite having top universities, the UK was rated as not sufficient (<5.0) in Research and Development Transfers.”
Dr Sreevas Sahasranamam, co-author of the GEM global report and associate professor in Entrepreneurship & Innovation at Strathclyde Business School in Glasgow, said: “Globally, we observe that the quality of entrepreneurship ecosystems are now better in the East, with UAE, Saudi Arabia, Taiwan and India taking the top four spots.
“These are clear trends that could accelerate the eastward movement of the centre of gravity of global economic activity.”