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In my opinion its to do with the laws of bankruptcy, the UK is a lot firmer on people who go bankrupt so there it affects peoples attitudes and investment into innovation and risk.
Of course the lax laws have the opposite affect in causing events like the GFC
Paul Graham has already detailed this subject in "Why to Move To a Startup Hub" and "Cities and Ambition" among other essays.
Because the British public is generally less experimental when it comes to technology, so launching something in the UK to be used initially by UK customers is next to pointless when you can just target the bigger, more experimental US market instead.
In the US, it's not uncommon to hear people talking about social media in public, whereas in the UK it's mostly restricted to 20 and 30-something digerati and teenagers. We've always had a "wait and see" approach here that doesn't lend itself to early entrance into tech markets (except, curiously, in the early 1980s with the microcomputer boom).
E-commerce took years to blossom in the UK after it was already semi-popular in the US. I still know plenty of people who don't "trust" the Internet - and I'm not even talking old people. It's an air of traditionalism and fear that makes the UK market a piss-poor one to pioneer new technologies with.
I'm British and British based and have always focused everything I create at the US market. Stuff sells better and people are more receptive and more positive in looking at new things. That's the sort of market that both I and growing companies want.
don't forget the UK still clings onto the culture of once a failure always a failure. In the USA its appreciated that startups fail often.
James McCutcheon said:In my opinion its to do with the laws of bankruptcy, the UK is a lot firmer on people who go bankrupt so there it affects peoples attitudes and investment into innovation and risk.
Of course the lax laws have the opposite affect in causing events like the GFC
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