The comedian Romesh Ranganathan is ‘gutted’. His local bakery in Crawley has shut its doors for good. A single shop closure might seem trivial. But follow the money trail and you realise it is a symptom of a deeper rot. The high street is bleeding out, one independent business at a time.
Sources confirm the bakery, a family-run operation for over 30 years, could not keep up with rising rents and dwindling footfall. This is a story repeated on every corner of every British town. Corporate landlords, remote from the communities they profit from, demand ever higher rents. Meanwhile, online giants vacuum up spending, leaving physical shops to fight over scraps.
Ranganathan’s public lament is a rare moment of celebrity solidarity with the small business struggle. But celebrity sadness does not pay the bills. The real question is: who is pocketing the money that should be keeping these shops alive?
Uncovered documents from commercial real estate firms show a pattern. Properties on struggling high streets are often bought up by investment funds. They hold them vacant, claiming they are ‘repositioning’. In reality, they are waiting for land values to rise, then they sell to developers. The bakery wasn't just a shop. It was a asset strip waiting to happen.
Local councils, strapped for cash, are powerless. Business rates are set nationally. They penalise small businesses while offering little relief. The government’s ‘levelling up’ agenda is a punchline. Crawley is not alone. From Bolton to Bromley, the story is the same.
Ranganathan, speaking to a local paper, said: ‘It’s heartbreaking. This was a place where everyone knew your name. Now it’s a boarded-up shell.’
But heartbreak doesn't stop the blight. The real scandal is the lack of accountability. Who in Whitehall is tracking the rate of small business closures? The answer is no one. The Department for Business and Trade collects data on administration but not on individual shop shutters. They don’t want to know.
Meanwhile, the beneficiaries remain opaque. Shell companies registered in tax havens hold many of these properties. The beneficiaries are shielded from scrutiny. This is not just a high street crisis. It is a money laundering opportunity.
Private equity firms have been circling UK high streets for years. They buy up portfolios of shops, then load them with debt. The rent is set to service that debt. When a tenant fails, they evict and rebrand. The cycle continues. The bakery in Crawley was likely a pawn in that game.
Ranganathan’s plea for people to ‘shop local’ is well meaning but naive. The problem is not consumer apathy. It is a rigged system. Business rates, VAT thresholds, and planning laws all favour big operators. Small businesses cannot compete.
So here we are: a beloved comedian mourning a bakery. It makes a good headline. But behind that headline is a trail of shell companies, offshore accounts, and policy failure. Until we follow that money, the high street will keep dying. One bakery at a time.








