कोशिश गोल्ड - मुक्त
Britain must invest in itself – and stop building companies for other countries
The Observer
|June 08, 2025
Will Hutton
-
Britain is beginning an overdue gear change that until now it has only half-heartedly accepted. It is to recognise that the great companies of tomorrow, the key to delivering growth, are not going to emerge spontaneously as creatures of the marketplace, but from an ecosystem of publicly created support. And once they are built, we have to work much harder to keep them here.
That's why a news item last week that didn't attract much notice really should have. Cambridge-based CMR Surgical, a fast-growing British life sciences company that makes a mobile robot capable of guiding minimally invasive surgery, and which could have been the next AstraZeneca or GSK, announced plans to sell itself, almost certainly to an American buyer, for up to $4bn. Whoever ends up the owner will be able to cornerstone its transformation into a company with global reach and create a de facto monopoly. But it won't be British.
From CMR's perspective, this is a passport into the lucrative US market. But it is not alone. Last year a string of Cambridge-based life science companies - over $12bn worth - were sold to the US, including Abcam and Darktrace. The US market is a magnet and for some companies American ownership is a fair trade-off for market access - but surely not so many. As the British Business Bank chairman Stephen Welton warned 18 months ago, the UK is in effect becoming an incubator of great companies - for other countries. In particular, to help the US grow more $1tn behemoths and therefore its growth rate.
यह कहानी The Observer के June 08, 2025 संस्करण से ली गई है।
हजारों चुनिंदा प्रीमियम कहानियों और 9,500 से अधिक पत्रिकाओं और समाचार पत्रों तक पहुंचने के लिए मैगज़्टर गोल्ड की सदस्यता लें।
क्या आप पहले से ही ग्राहक हैं? साइन इन करें
The Observer से और कहानियाँ
The Observer
Battle to become the global leader in defence tech gets heated
In a world riven by conflict, Germany's Helsing and US-based Anduril are piling on value as order books bulge.
4 mins
September 14, 2025
The Observer
The lion
We lions are philosophers. We get a lot of time for thinking; it’s in our nature.
2 mins
September 14, 2025

The Observer
How Syria's stolen children were used to break the hearts and minds of their parents
A campaign of child abduction carried out in collusion with a western charity was used by the Assad regime as a weapon of war against the families that opposed him.
13 mins
September 14, 2025
The Observer
Britain can become one of the world's top tech economies - if it takes the risks
It's time to change the subject. A programme of mass deportations and leaving the European Convention on Human Rights is not going to deliver either growth or prosperity.
9 mins
September 14, 2025

The Observer
Misinformation and myth: the UK's phoney war over human rights
The debate over the future of the European Convention on Human Rights will shape conference season and beyond, writes political editor Rachel Sylvester
6 mins
September 14, 2025

The Observer
Assassination of Charlie Kirk strips Maga of the man who brought the youth vote to Trump
The first family mourns the White House insider whose extremist views reflected the Republican party's major shift to the right
5 mins
September 14, 2025
The Observer
Mandelson saga and Epstein links cast shadow over Trump's UK trip
When Donald Trump touches down on UK soil in Air Force One on Tuesday, a two-day period of peril for the US president and British prime minister Keir Starmer will begin.
3 mins
September 14, 2025

The Observer
The UN must get back in the ring and fight Mark Malloch-Brown
A recent Reuters headline noted: “UN report finds United Nations reports are not widely read”.
5 mins
September 14, 2025

The Observer
Prepare for revolution now, Elon Musk tells London rally as police come under attack
US tech billionaire calls for downfall of Labour government in speech to 110,000 marchers at Robinson's Unite the Kingdom protest
4 mins
September 14, 2025
The Observer
Big pharma's cash pull-out lands blow on UK economy
Slowly, then all at once. That's how the government's “vision” for life sciences came to the brink of disaster in the space of a week.
1 min
September 14, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size