The Virgin Group founder came under fire this month after it emerged he was living full-time on Necker in the British Virgin Islands, which he bought as an uninhabited island in 1979.
Being a resident
there means he can avoid Britain's 50 percent income tax rate on high earners
as well as capital gains tax, though it does limit the time he can spend each
year in the UK.
"I did not go
there for any other reason than that I love the place. After 45 years of
working in the UK I am choosing to live on Necker," a tanned Branson in an
open-necked shirt, jeans and black leather jacket told Reuters in an interview.
"When I am (on Necker)
I can play tennis, I can kitesurf, I keep my body fit but I can also work hard
and from there I travel off around the world," he said, adding that he had
no plans to ever retire.
Branson, 63, in
London to launch a scheme called Virgin Startup to help fund and mentor young
British entrepreneurs, said most of his time was now spent on not-for-profit
ventures.
But he said he was
committed to encouraging aspiring entrepreneurs after he got his break as a
16-year-old when his mother lent him 300 pounds ($480) to set up Student
magazine.
Branson, listed as
Britain's sixth-richest resident this year by Forbes, said he was used to
criticism, but his companies had always paid their tax bills and created
thouands of jobs.
"You are always
going to get criticism in life and you have to brush yourself down and do what
you think is right and create products that make a difference to people's
lives," he said.
-Reuters
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