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Chancellor urged to ditch 'gimmicks' and focus on growth in Autumn Budget

The boss of a founders club said the Chancellor should avoid 'gimmick' policies and instead focus on 'bold moves that make growth the rational choice again'

Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves speaks at a business reception at Lancaster House in central London in September 2025(Image: PA)

Ahead of the Autumn Budget, City Reporter Samuel Norman engages in a Budget Briefing with leading industry figures. This week, the chief executive of founders club Helm advocates for bold innovation policies to take centre stage.

Chancellor Rachel Reeves has been urged to utilise her second Autumn Budget to make more audacious strides for the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's innovation economy and boost international competitiveness, according to the head of a business founders club, as reported by .

The Chancellor has been advised to eschew gimmick policies and extend her support for start-ups and innovative firms.

Andreas Adamides, the chief executive of the exclusive founders club Helm, told City AM: "The Budget doesn't need a headline gimmick – just a few bold moves that make growth the rational choice again."

The Australian-Cypriot entrepreneur assumed leadership at Helm, previously known as the Supper Club, in 2022 as part of its pandemic recovery. The group was established by Duncan Cheatle in 2003 and aims to assist high-growth scaling firms.

To achieve "long-term competitiveness," Adamides stated that support for innovation and skills must be prioritised when Reeves steps up to the dispatch box on 26 November.

He further added that the Budget must establish solid foundations for future growth plans to prevent "policy whiplash" that "kills confidence faster than any tax rise".

"Scaleups plan on certainty – change the rules mid-cycle and you strangle the very firms creating jobs and exports".