Reference
5 articles tagged reference.
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UK Migration in May 2026 — A Reference
A reference on UK migration and benefits policy as of May 2026. Net migration has fallen sharply, lifetime fiscal contribution varies sharply by route, asylum accommodation procurement is the largest documented cost overrun, voluntary returns are eleven times cheaper than enforced. The publication does not advocate a single policy direction; it lays out the evidence, the available policy options, what each major political party would do, and seven parallel framings — cohesion, protection, demographic, AI labour market, capacity, emigration, and sovereignty — that select and weight the same evidence differently.
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Mars Industrialisation — Reference Materials
Document 7 of the Building Mars set. The reference appendix. Full assumptions ledger, target company list with funding status and acquisition rationale, capital sources and investor map, citations with balanced further reading from supporters, critics, and skeptics. The verification anchor for facts cited across Documents 1 through 6.
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What the Natural Experiment Shows
The US, UK, and EU run variants of the same venture model under different conditions. Comparing the three lets us ask which features of the system are intrinsic to running a venture model at all, and which are local-design choices that could be different. The line between the two changes what reform is possible.
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VC across the US, UK, and EU — a jurisdictional reference for prospective founders
The operational counterpart to the main analytical piece. Side-by-side comparison of structural features (LP base, founder tax regimes, exit market depth, employee equity treatment, 2025-2026 regulatory changes) across the US, UK, and the major EU venture markets. Practical reference for founders deciding where to incorporate, fundraise, or relocate. May 2026 snapshot.
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UK Tech and the IHT Reform — The Funding Stack and the Fiscal Model
Technical depth on each part of the UK tech funding stack — founders, angels, VCs, PE, EIS, LPs, early employees — and a 25-year fiscal model of what each policy option means for the Treasury, including second-order effects.