
🎙️ Voice is AI-generated. Inconsistencies may occur.
The United Kingdom is exiting the European Union (EU), and its seismic ripples are being felt over 5,000 miles away in Silicon Valley. The British exit, or "Brexit," shook the global market on Friday morning, but for tech, the impact reverberates much closer to home. London's start-up center is the third largest in the world behind San Francisco and New York City, and a healthy number of entrepreneurs flocked there to work in the tech sector.
The British tech sector has overwhelmingly supported remaining in the EU. Almost ninety percent supported the "Remain" vote, according to a March survey. But now that Remain lost—receiving 48.1 percent of the vote—some tech firms told the British press they may consider relocating.
Coincidentally, President Barack Obama was in the heart of the global tech sector at Stanford University on Friday to speak at the Global Entrepreneurship Summit. Obama did not specifically address Brexit, but said the U.S.'s relationship with the United Kingdom will remain unchanged. "We agreed that our economic and financial teams will remain in close contact as we stay focused on ensuring economic growth and financial stability," Obama said.
Most of the Brexit discourse among Silicon Valley CEOs, venture capitalists and entrepreneurs took place on Twitter.
Some such as Om Malik, True Ventures partner and founder of the defunct tech journalism outlet GigaOM, expressed surprise:
Brexited! Wow. Just wow!
— OM (@om) June 24, 2016
First #brexit used to happen in colonies. Now it is happening in Britain itself. We have come a full circle.
— OM (@om) June 24, 2016
Others such as British Silicon Valley entrepreneur Kulkeer Taggar and venture capitalists Keith Rabois and Jason Calacanis tried to make sense of what happened:
A consequence of increasing income inequality. A direct consequence of globalisation is that working class wages are suppressed.
— Kulveer ⚡️ (@kul) June 24, 2016
This is the key lesson. Elites can no longer dictate policy. https://t.co/Axqny4Y205
— Keith Rabois (@rabois) June 24, 2016
1/If the rich get much richer while the middle class gets ground down, expect to see more #brexit & trump-like strangeness.
— jason (@Jason) June 24, 2016
And yet others such as venture capitalist Paul Graham wondered how the Brexit will be viewed by future generations:
A lot of people in England are going to feel sheepish next time they talk to their grandchildren.
— Paul Graham (@paulg) June 24, 2016
Most of Silicon Valley supported the United Kingdom remaining in the European Union, but there was a small contingency who supported Brexit. Paul Carr of PandoDaily wrote five reasons why Brexit will be a good thing. Marc Andreessen, arguably the most influential venture capitalist in Silicon Valley, mused that Brexit might turn out well.
It's entirely possible Brexit makes UK more attractive place to build and finance new technology companies. https://t.co/0NOObvAenV
— Marc Andreessen (@pmarca) June 24, 2016
But the most stereotypically Silicon Valley line of thought about Brexit has been the libertarian-tinged idea that nation-states or continental unions are too inefficient, that a smaller city-state—perhaps the size of London or the Bay Area—would be more effective at governance.
Long held hypothesis:
— Jeff Garzik (@jgarzik) June 24, 2016
A city-state is the most naturally occurring governmental size. Larger nations will break up. #brexit
City states failed because of conquerors (Alexander, Caeser, Genghis). If we have democracies, maybe it can work this time?
— Kulveer ⚡️ (@kul) June 24, 2016