In England the entrepreneurs are immigrants

Turks are specialised in cloths manufacturing, Albanians in cleaning, Poles and Iranians in dentistry. Sri Lankans run the UK’s petrol stations, Serbs and Croats are architects, Italians in business associated with food. Traders come, instead, from the Silk Road.
In the galaxy of companies in the United Kingdom, the entrepreneurial spirit of immigrants exceeds, in proportion to population, that one of English, Scottish and Welsh and it is fundamental to the country’s economy. That comes out from a research by Experian which has built up a database of nearly of half a million entrepreneurs. Data has been analyzed by Richard Webber, visiting professor of geography at King’s College London.
According to the study, the restrictive measures in entrances could stifle future growth of the country and undermine the dynamism of the economy, given the positive effects of self-employed immigrant. In recent months, as indeed happens in many other European countries, the programme of the main three parties aims to restrict immigration from outside the European Union, with access granted only to those who possess skills in short supply. At the risk of cutting off those who have no recognized qualifications but possess the natural business flair combined with ability to create wealth that you can’t learn.