redhotcurry.com - all the curry & more!
 
 
  
Home | Feedback | About Us | Sitemap
 
 
 News | Money | Views | Entertainment | Eating Out  | Food & Drink | Style | Health | Horoscopes
Sports | Travel | Culture | Member Services - Sign-up | Discuss | Chat | Email
 
 
MONEY 
 
   Money -> Child Entrepreneurs?  
 

ARTICLES

Young Entrepreneurs Give Something Back (12/03)

HSE tells UK Asians to 'WorkSmart' (12/03)

Removing Red Tape Burden on Business (12/03)

Asians fail to reach the Top says CRE (12/03)

Asian Business Association Celebrates (12/03)

All Work, Low Pay (12/03)

Business Link appoints Asian Chairman (11/03)

SONAR - The Jewel of East London (10/03)

"Bringing Space Down to Earth" (10/03)

British Asians & Corporate Citizenship (10/03)

Hewitt urges Companies to be Race Aware (10/03)

All Boys Again for "Business Oscars! (09/03)

Business Obstacles for Asian Women (09/03)

Asian Business Women on "inside track" (10/03)

Housewives lead female entrepreneurship (09/03)

TiE UK - Autumn 2003 Business Events (09/03)

BFA calls for more Ethnic Franchisees (09/03)

Diversity in HR? (09/03)

Fair Terms for Public Sector Workers (07/03)

British Library offers UK Asian Business Info (07/03)

Bill Clinton challenges UK Asian Entrepreneurs (07/03)

Two notable Asians named "Entrepreneurs of the Year" (07/03)

Curry on the menu at Int'l Food Fair (07/03)

Narayana Murthy is a World Entrepreneur (06/03)

British firm to export Curry to Tenerife (06/03)

Bollywood nets cash for Asian businessmen (04/03)

Racism still pervades UK's workplaces (04/03)

Asian Business Awards 2003 (03/03)

Bosses Pay Lip Service to Diversity (02/03)

Entrepreneurs as 'Pop Idols'? (01/03)

Child Entrepreneurs?(12/02)

UK Entrepreneurs faring well in Downturn (12/02)

Government to encourage black entrepreneurs (11/02)

Loan Guarantee Scheme extended (11/02)

Hewitt unveils "shake up" of business support (11/02)

Nasa Khan named UK's Top Entrepreneur (10/02)

39 Steps to boost Business support (10/02)

Asian "live wires" pick up top business prize (08/02)

Small Business can access EU Funds (07/02)

Shortage of Asian Managers in the UK (06/02)

SME access to Government Tenders (06/02)

New proposals to boost ethnic start-ups (05/02)

Banks "ripping off" SMEs (03/02)

Hewitt introduces The Enterprise Bill (03/02)

Asians more likely to be entrepreneurs (02/02)

Government supports Ethnic Business (01/02)


MONEY MATTERS
5 Tips for Trading Online
5 Tips for Trading Online
Everyone is Net Trading
Everyone is Net Trading
Choosing a Broker
Choosing a broker
Personal Finance Sites
Personal finance sites
Personal Tax Returns
Personal Tax Returns
Tax Return Checklist
Tax Return Checklist

Net Trading by Alpesh Patel   Net Trading is essential reading for traders and those who want to trade online.
read more.

 

CHILD ENTREPRENEURS?
(17 December 2002)

School-age entrepreneur?Giving every child an experience of enterprise by the time they leave school is to be a part of the new three-year strategy for small businesses, unveiled today. Other aims include an enhanced strategic role for the SBS, boosting the profile of Business Link and ensuring a better regulatory environment for small firms. The strategy, "Small Business and Government - The Way Forward", is designed to encourage more people to have the ambition of starting their own business and give anyone who takes that step every chance to succeed.

Launching the strategy, Martin Wyn Griffith, Chief Executive of the SBS said: "This is a three year strategy with a long-term vision. We're fine-tuning the way we work in order to ensure a better engagement between government and the small business community. The SBS will work as a centre of expertise, an innovator and an engine of change. Our aim is to encourage people from all works of life to want to start and grow a business."

The strategy focuses on seven 'pillars' to boost the UK's entrepreneurial culture. They are:

  1. building an enterprise culture - including helping young people gain an understanding of entrepreneurship through influencing them at school;
  2. encouraging a more dynamic start-up market - a series of local enterprise events will bring together Government and private service providers to give potential entrepreneurs information about help available;
  3. building the capability for small business growth - raising performance through boosting management skills and workforce development. Recent SBS research has shown the massive benefit that goes with taking professional advice;
  4. improving access to finance - ensuring gaps in finance provision are met, through initiatives like Early Growth Funding and the completion of the Regional Venture Capital Fund scheme across the country;
  5. encouraging enterprise in disadvantaged communities and under-represented groups - such as continued investment in projects through the Phoenix Fund. SBS targets are now in place to reduce the gap between start-ups in the most and least disadvantaged areas;
  6. improving small businesses' experience of Government services - SBS will work with other Government departments and agencies to provide more joined-up services to small business and easier access to those services via a new Business Link portal;
  7. developing better regulation and policy - SBS will work with the Small Business Council and the Better Regulation Task Force to ensure policy makers take full account of small business views. By March 2003 SBS will introduce a 'small firms impact test' to ensure that small firms concerns are considered at the very earliest stages of policy-making.

The strategy builds on the Pre Budget Report paper Enterprise Britain: a modern approach to meeting the enterprise challenge and the joint Treasury and SBS Cross Cutting Review of Services for Small Business report, published in October.

Welcoming the report William Sargent, Chairman of the Small Business Council, the body that advises Government on small business issues, added: "We are encouraged that our vision for the SBS as a key policy partner for Government Departments has been welcomed, and we look forward to supporting the SBS in its new role".

The full document is available on the SBS website.

Top

 
           
 

© 2001-2004. Copyright of Redhotcurry Limited. All Rights Reserved.
Business Information | About us | Opportunities | Press Room | Become a Contributor | Contact Us
Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | Terms of Contribution | Community Standards