
Our quote of the day comes from Tim Hames, director general of the British Private Equity and Venture Capital Association, via an excellent article on London by Charles Goodhart, which is well worth reading in its own right.
‘As far as the professional middle class is concerned London has become a form of gigantic black hole dragging everything into it. To choose to build a career anywhere else is, at best, to be deemed eccentric and, at worst, a disturbing indication of a lack of ambition. In England, it is often London or bust.’
Anyone familiar with our work on the Finance Curse will recognise this immediately. As one cross-country academic study put it, highly remunerated finance “literally bids rocket scientists away from the satellite industry.”
London’s gains (or the gains of a lucky segment of Londoners) are so often obtained at the expense of others in Britain.
Related articles

UN tax convention hub – updates & resources

Four definitions to change the world: Struggles over meaning in the UN tax convention negotiations

Fiscal hell or mirage? What Spain’s wage debate gets wrong

Introducing the Real Estate Secrecy Index

Indicator deep dive: Golden Visas

The European Court of Human Rights has upheld the weaponisation of privacy to restrict tax authorities’ access to banking data

She cleans your house but the tax system can’t see her

What we learned from three years of conversations on poverty beyond growth
Q&A on California’s proposed legislation on Worldwide Combined Reporting (WWCR)
27 May 2026

California steps up for tax fairness

