The smell of fresh sponge and buttercream is supposed to be the scent of a new British enterprise. But in the kitchens of a nation, the dream is turning sour.
Cake sheds, those domestic bakeries run from home, are generating up to £1,000 a week for some. Yet the boom is showing cracks. The sugar rush of pandemic-era baking has worn off. Now, rising ingredient costs, stricter hygiene regulations, and the return of high street competition are squeezing margins.
One operator, Sarah from Milton Keynes, told me: 'I was making 50 cakes a week. Now it's 20. People aren't spending like they were.' The Lobby hears whispers of a quiet crisis. A survey by the UK Home Baking Association shows a 15% drop in sales over the last quarter. The number of new registrations with local environmental health officers has fallen by a third.
But this is not just an economic story. It is a political one. The government's 'levelling up' agenda promised to support microbusinesses like these. Yet the Treasury is reportedly blocking a proposed cut to VAT on bakery ingredients, citing fiscal drag. A source close to the Chancellor said: 'We can't afford to subsidise every hobby that turns commercial.'
The backbench mood is mutinous. A group of Conservative MPs, led by the chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group for Small Businesses, is drafting an amendment to the Finance Bill. They want a temporary relief on energy costs for home-based food businesses. But the whips' office is nervous. Defections could sink the vote.
Meanwhile, Labour is circling. A shadow business minister told me: 'This is a government that talks about backing Britain but leaves small bakers to crumble.' It is a line that plays well in focus groups. But the real battle is within the Tory party. The 'cake shed' vote is the sort of aspirational, small-state demographic that the party needs to hold.
Polling from YouGov this morning shows a 6-point drop in Conservative support among small business owners since March. The data is being briefed to Tory MPs by the party's campaign headquarters. The message is clear: fix this, or lose the next election.
The story of the cake shed is a metaphor for the British economy. A burst of post-lockdown creativity, now choked by inflation and red tape. The dream fades not with a bang, but a soggy bottom.








