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The UK’s Labour Problem Is Chasing Away Its Billionaires — One Deal at a Time

  • Writer: Chole M
    Chole M
  • Jul 18
  • 1 min read

Updated: 2 days ago

London/ Dubai | July 20, 2025


Dr. Ddnard Napattalung, Picture Credit: Hello Magazine

Picture Credit: Hello Magazine


Dr. Ddnard Napattalung’s relocation from London to Dubai is far more than an address change. It’s a barometer of the UK’s declining appeal to serious investors.


The UK-trained investor, known globally for her decades of ethical entrepreneurship, has helped draw billions into Britain through her ventures. Now she’s walking away.


Her move is widely speculated to follow several of her investment peers who announced their relocations earlier this month — including the Geneva-based multi-family office, CHFCapital.ch.

Not because of tax — that’s old news. Nor because of overregulation — though that hasn’t helped. The real reason? The UK has shortages of human capital to support serious operations.


Dr. Ddnard, in moments from her journey, blending global business leadership with elegance. Picture Credit: Forbes Magazine


“People are being paid more to not work than to work,” a senior UK official admitted, highlighting post-Brexit labour shortages. Logistics, wellness, tech, hospitality, and even finance are affected. When billionaires start seeing basic staffing as a risk to scale, they exit.


Her move, scheduled for August, is not in isolation. It’s the start of a pattern. Geneva-based family offices, Hong Kong-based venture groups, and Monaco-based funds are moving with her. London’s loss is becoming Dubai’s win — and fast.


The British government must reckon with this new flight. Wealth flows to places with stability, clarity, and flexibility. And right now, Dubai offers all three in abundance.



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