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It is no surprise that the Chancellor of the Exchequer, Rt. Hon. Rachel Reeves faces an insurmountable challenge as she finalises her Autumn Statement on the 26th of November. The fiscal reality the UK is navigating is sobering. Nevertheless, in a globally inter-connected world, where geopolitical tensions have flared and major economies are aggressively competing, one could argue that this is a make-or-break moment for the UK’s Tech Sector.
The US, EU, and China are acting strategically on technology, explicitly acknowledging it as a current and future driver of their economies in terms of growth, security, and resilience. The US CHIPS and Science Act (2022) and Inflation Reduction Act (2022), the EU’s European Chips Act (2022-2023) and the Horizon Europe and Digital Europe Programme, and China’s National AI Development Plan (2023) all set out clear long-term policy intent and put the government budget at the heart of driving transformative outcomes in AI and other frontier technology.
The UK is not without a strategy. The recent Modern Industrial Strategy (2025) lays out a 10-year vision for boosting business investment, fostering growth in key sectors, and enhancing the overall economic landscape. The National Quantum Strategy, backed by GBP 2.5 billion over 10 years (2024–2034) for quantum research and commercialisation, and the UKRI Technology Missions Fund, a GBP 320 million fund to back ‘technology missions’ in AI, quantum, engineering biology, and future telecommunications, are central pillars of this approach. Similarly, the HMRC’s R&D Tax Credits regime has recently been reformed to improve efficiency and address abuse.
The UK’s innovation economy was estimated at USD 1.3 trillion in the middle of the year[1] and is ranked first in Europe for venture capital. However, a more recent report[2] from the Parliamentary Committee on Science and Technology casts a less positive view. Highlighting a ‘failure to scale’, it argues that science and technology companies that start up in the UK face a deep-rooted problem that has now reached a crisis point, adding that ‘the UK’s inability to retain economic benefits of its R&D is a fatal flaw to any growth strategy’.
How can the UK ensure its tech ecosystem remains globally competitive and drives tangible benefit for the economy?
The UK does not need to copy the US or the EU, but it must match their scale and clarity. It has the talent; what it needs now is fiscal certainty and long-term commitment to anchor the UK’s tech leadership.
[1] UK Innovation Update Q2 2025 I HSBC Innovation Banking
[2] Bleeding to death: the science and technology growth emergency




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