In the opinion of the
Resolution Foundation entrepreneurs' relief is expensive, regressive and ineffective. Scrapping the tax relief, they argued in 2018, could generate £2.7 billion that could be spent on the
public sector. However, that figure supposes that the relief scheme has zero effect in encouraging entrepreneurship and that individuals who had worked hard to create wealth would not look to reduce their tax bills. The Resolution Foundation maintains this
tax break is enough to give £100 per year to every household in the country if it is abolished. Roughly 52,000 individuals benefited from the tax break in 2015–16, but the chief financial gain was for a few people, with about 6,000 claiming over £1m each. The overall cost of the tax relief over a decade was roughly £22bn though its effectiveness has not been seriously evaluated. Most entrepreneurs who claim the tax break say they did not know about it when they started their company, the foundation maintains. == Investor's Relief ==