Evidence-Based Analysis. No Industry Paymasters.

The UK hair and beauty sector deserves honest analysis based on official data, not manufactured crisis narratives designed to drive membership sales and policy lobbying.

Every analysis on this site is backed by government statistics, Freedom of Information responses, and transparent methodology. Challenge our data. Verify our calculations. We welcome scrutiny.

Former salon owner. Former wholesaler. No commercial conflicts. Just facts.
15+ FOI Requests
7 Published Analyses
18+ Months Research
0 Industry Paymasters

Published Analysis

Challenging industry claims with official government data

Published

The Statutory Authority That Isn't

H&BC claims to be "the only statutory authority" for hairdressers. The 1964 Act creates only a voluntary register with no regulatory powers. Analysis of the Act's provisions shows Section 14 explicitly prohibits the powers H&BC claims to possess.

Key Findings

  • 1964 Act creates voluntary register only
  • Section 14 prohibits powers over service/charges
  • Register not maintained (businesses closed 7 years ago still listed)
  • Zero accountability mechanisms in place
Published

The 24% Bankruptcy Claim That Can't Exist

Industry leaders claim 24% of UK personal bankruptcies come from hair and beauty. The Insolvency Service confirms: this data doesn't exist. Company insolvencies: 1.31%, not 24%. Manual verification shows real figure is 0.15-1.5% maximum.

Key Findings

  • Insolvency Service doesn't collect data by sector
  • Company insolvencies: 1.31% not 24%
  • Manual Gazette count: ~30 bankruptcies (0.15%)
  • Claim is off by 16-20x minimum
Published

The "Zero Apprenticeships by 2027" Projection

H&BC claims there will be "no apprenticeships left by 2027." Analysis of DfE data shows this is a projection to zero from a declining trend line, not a forecast. Starts recovered to 6,670 in 2023-24, matching 2019 levels.

Key Findings

  • 2023-24: 6,670 starts (recovered to 2019 levels)
  • "Zero by 2027" is projection, not forecast
  • 2025-26 partial data: 2,440 starts already
  • Trend line ≠ inevitable outcome
Published

The 93% Employment Fall Fabrication

H&BC claims employment will fall 93% by 2030. Their own report shows total workforce barely changes (232,700 → 231,000). HMRC data shows 398,000 workers, up 2.1% since 2018. They measured only employee decline while self-employment grows.

Key Findings

  • Report's own forecast: 231,000 total workers in 2030
  • HMRC shows 398,000 workers, +2.1% growth
  • 93% measures only employees, ignores 225k self-employed
  • Uses ONS data (232k) not HMRC data (398k)
Published

The CBI Economics Report: A Methodological Deconstruction

CBI Economics claims £2.4bn VAT loss, 93% employment collapse, zero apprenticeships by 2027. Calculation shows £22.7m reality (106x exaggeration). H&BC admits being "integral part of drafting" the report. When challenged, CBI offered phone calls, declined written defense.

Key Findings

  • £2.4bn claim actually £22.7m (100+ years at real rate)
  • £14.4bn productivity loss: methodology undefined
  • Sample: 542 respondents (1.13% of sector)
  • VAT reform funded by forcing 70% of salons into VAT
Published

The Tax Burden Myth: Why Salons Don't Pay "3 Times More" Than Retail

Industry lobbyists claim salons pay "3-5 times more tax than retail." Analysis of comparable service businesses reveals salons actually rank 2nd lowest in tax burden. The claim relies on fraudulent comparison between incompatible business models.

Key Findings

  • Salons pay £279k vs childcare £383k at same turnover
  • Tax burden correlates with labour intensity (r=0.995)
  • Even at 60% labour, salons pay proportional tax
  • Retail comparison mathematically invalid
Published

Treasury Lobbying: False Claims in Government Meetings

Analysis of claims made in Treasury meetings and Parliamentary evidence sessions. Examination of whether statistics presented to government officials match official data sources and whether conflicts of interest were disclosed.

Key Findings

  • False statistics presented to Treasury officials
  • Claims contradicted by official government data
  • Commercial conflicts of interest undisclosed
  • Coordinated lobbying campaign documented

Future Analysis

Potential future investigations - subject to time and relevance

Under Consideration

The "Disguised Employment" Myth: What 450 Tribunal Cases Show

Proposed analysis of employment tribunal cases to verify claims about widespread disguised employment. Preliminary review of 450+ cases shows only 2% involved employment status disputes, with minimal successful claims against chair rental.

Under Consideration

Ireland's VAT Cut: What the Data Actually Shows

Proposed analysis of Irish Central Statistics Office data to verify industry claims that VAT cuts saved jobs. Preliminary review suggests employment fell following VAT reductions, contrary to claims made in UK lobbying.