Salome
you are what you is
Farage has left the (burning) building.
Something with rats and ships.
Something with rats and ships.
Farage has left the (burning) building.
Something with rats and ships.
this is eerie - article published by Nick Clegg (Lib Dems) the day before the referendum
https://inews.co.uk/opinion/comment/will-wake-vote-leave/
Nick Clegg: what you will wake up to if we vote to Leave…
Wednesday June 22nd 2016
Are you still undecided? Are you someone who – pummelled by weeks of claim and counter-claim – has been left exhausted and annoyed? Have you been looking for answers, yet all you’ve encountered are insults and exaggeration?
Maybe you’re so fed up you think to hell with it, let’s throw caution to the wind and vote Brexit. Imagine, however, what happens next. Imagine how you will feel on 24 June?
Having woken on Friday to the news we’re quitting the EU, you will assume that those who persuaded you to take that leap of faith have a plan about what to do next.
So imagine how dismayed you will feel when you discover, instead, that Nigel Farage, Michael Gove and Boris Johnson can’t agree among themselves what life outside the EU looks like? They may be united by a ferocious loathing of the EU, but they have no shared plan for the future.
Gridlock
So you will look towards our leaders in Westminster to sort out the mess. Instead, they argue among themselves: the Conservatives descend into a bloody leadership election; Parliament enters years of constitutional gridlock trying to extricate itself from the intricate legal stitching which binds us to the EU and gives us access to world markets.
Then you discover just how unprepared the Government is – that there simply aren’t enough trade negotiators in Whitehall, for instance, with the expertise to renegotiate 50 or so international trade accords.
As politicians bicker, you become increasingly unnerved by what’s happening in the economy, too: overseas investors take fright; money flows out of the country; our credit rating is slashed; the interest on our borrowing goes up; unemployment rises; sterling tanks; prices in the shops go up.
Nicola Sturgeon soon announces that preparations have started for a second independence referendum, claiming it is the only way to keep Scotland in the EU. And this time most commentators think that she will win.
Still, at least they will finally sort out our borders, right? After all, ending mass immigration was the Brexiteers biggest claim of all.
So imagine how you’ll feel when you discover that they don’t have a plan for that either? Some argue for a new land border between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland to stop EU immigrants coming in through the “back door”. Others that a new border would harm the peace in Northern Ireland. The Australian points system which they advocate is no solution either – it has led to immigration levels twice as high as in the UK.
Panic
Panic starts to spread among the 1.3 million Brits who live, study and retire elsewhere in the EU. Spanish politicians start to complain about paying for public services used by British pensioners. If we start excluding Spanish doctors and nurses, why should they keep paying for our pensioners?
And then there’s that faintly queasy feeling you get when you see Donald Trump on the TV, visiting the UK on Friday, declaring his joy at the Brexit vote.
Meanwhile Angela Merkel invites President Obama to an emergency summit to discuss the fallout – the UK is, of course, excluded from what soon emerges as the new “special relationship” between the US and Germany.
The Brexiteers say you will “regain control”. But it won’t feel like that. Instead, the economy lurches to recession; there’s upheaval in Westminster; no plan to allay concerns about immigration; another referendum in Scotland; a steep slide in Britain’s standing in the world.
Our wonderful country adrift – not in control. And for what? Nigel, Michael and Boris still won’t be able to tell you why.
Well think about it, the sterling pound held the strongest exchange rate against the US dollar to a ratio of almost 1 to 2 around 2007. It has been then consistently diminishing reaching an average of 1 to 1.60 and now it's at its minimum at 1 to 1.30.Long gone for good? I would imagine that's a bit of an exaggeration.
Well think about it, the sterling pound held the strongest exchange rate against the US dollar to a ratio of almost 1 to 2 around 2007. It has been then consistently diminishing reaching an average of 1 to 1.60 and now it's at its minimum at 1 to 1.30.
You can speculate that it will get stronger or weaker depending on how their economic policies with the EU play out, but it's uncertain. The euro has also been falling rapidly.
Seeing what was once considered one of the most stable and strongest currencies being rejected in exchange houses around the world makes you think how long it will take to recover, if ever.
Again, how?If anything, the long term implications could even be positive for the United Kingdom.
Again, how?
If anything, especially in the long run 'unions' are beneficial.
Hedging your bets and all.
It's not like the UK is an economic powerhouse outside of The City.
So what happens if the financial sector takes another beating (which does seem like it's on its way to happen)? Will the UK then have to start to look at Greece as an example so it can become a tourism based economy?
A large producer of energy.
I didn't claim that the long term effects will be disastrous.There's plenty of ways this can be beneficial to the UK. For one, if the EU doesn't survive, the UK alone and ahead of that future potential mess could be beneficial. But let's not act like there's a precedence for this. I'm not even defending Brexit as an appropriate move that was supported by any populous rationale. But to act as though anyone truly knows the long term effects of this move... what basis have you to support that claim?
Of course that is a laughable idea. But my point is that The City represent a somewhat disproportionate amount of the UK economy and that the UK will be better able to deal with another financial services crisis inside than outside of the UK.That's a laughable idea that the UK would need to become a tourism based economy. We are talking about the fifth largest economy in volume. In a fully developed country. Loaded with infrastructure. Connected in trade to dozens of countries worldwide who still hail the queen. A large producer of energy. An even larger producer of science and technology, aerospace defense, military, and arms.
I don't think the UK will enter the dark ages now. There is no reason why it would beyond that it has seemed to enter a period of political instability and business does not like instability. Months prior to the referendum companies already postponed possible investments in the UK. I don't see how that is going to change in the next couple of years with no insight in what Brexit is going to entail. Will the Brexit voters be satisfied with a deal similar to what Norway and Switzerland have which will achieve about 1% of what they were promised by the Leave Campaign? I don't know. But if I was deciding over funds of a major company I would look elsewhere to put my money.Yeah, they're about to take a near term beating. But to think a country as well equipped as the United Kingdom is somehow set to fall off the face of the earth because Europe will temporarily shit on them is silly. Hell, half of the economic beating they're about to take is purely based upon global panic.
I don't think the UK will enter the dark ages now. There is no reason why it would beyond that it has seemed to enter a period of political instability and business does not like instability. Months prior to the referendum companies already postponed possible investments in the UK. I don't see how that is going to change in the next couple of years with no insight in what Brexit is going to entail. Will the Brexit voters be satisfied with a deal similar to what Norway and Switzerland have which will achieve about 1% of what they were promised by the Leave Campaign? I don't know. But if I was deciding over funds of a major company I would look elsewhere to put my money.
Why UK would perform better outside than inside the EU, I still don't understand. Yes, if the entire EU explodes after UK has left (to be honest, if the EU is going to explode I reckon it's more likely to happen within the next 3 years while UK is still part of EU) than this would be the case. But otherwise, I don't see it.
I don't think it's even a question of whether or not the Brexit voters will be okay with economic deals similar to that of Switzerland or Norway. It's not only not a question, but highly inevitable.
An even larger producer of science and technology
Why would the Brexit voters be okay with a situation similar as Norway or Switzerland? That would not address many issues they were railing against (most notably, immigration from other EU countries).
I think the picture below gives a good overview of the different scenarios available to the UK:
As you can see, an absolute Brexit with full independence will close most of the opportunities for the UK. The City is highly services oriented, so a restriction on movement of services (and people) will have a huge impact on the British economy. But if they do want to have free trade of services and people, they'll also need to comply with many other regulations that would seem to clash with their Brexit stance.
But if I was deciding over funds of a major company I would look elsewhere to put my money.
It is not an assumption that companies are postponing investments in UK.Would you? It seems like the assumption in this thread is that the EU is a hell of a lot healthier and more stable than it really is. You already have three member states in full-blown crisis (Cyprus, Greece, Spain) with another one looking poised to follow in Italy, also apparently rumblings of major financial problems on the rise in France. You can talk about the Pound struggling as well, which distracts from the Euro being barely 1.10 vs the Dollar as we speak. Only five years ago it was 1.60 if I am remembering correctly, maybe even higher.
And if the EU will blow up, the UK will blow up with it as they are part of the EU and will be so for at least another 2.5 years. At a minimum.
I think Popmartijn's chart shows pretty accurately why it is doubtful the political situation will stabilize.if the political situation stabilizes and investors/business are still tepid about the UK, then we can start talking about long-term complications.
The UK government can choose to fund those for themselves if they like
I think Popmartijn's chart shows pretty accurately why it is doubtful the political situation will stabilize.
About half the voters who showed up voted quite passionately for a Brexit. They will find out they are not going to get what they thought they would.
Not even almost.
I don't see how this could lead to a stabilized political climate for years.
And years of no progress will have negative consequences for what follows.
contingency plans are already underway re. relocating the financial services, and job losses have already been announced - financial sector just couldn't stay in Britain due to passporting requirements... lots of contenders (including France) currently rubbing their hands together with glee... they want Britain out as soon as possible
To think the Brexit plan won't somehow be masked as "different" but end up being virtually the same as the UK being in the EU is silly.
I think there is another dynamic to consider in UK financial relationships with the USA and also China and Southeast Asia. SE Asia especially is an important emerging market. I don't see why Brexit would harm British interests in those places. I get that the Eurozone is important to the British economy, but it's not the only major partner they have.
And this (relocation of FS) can happen quickly and permanently.
Most people here are not Canadian and therefore probably not aware of the fact that Montreal was Canada's financial capital where nearly all financial services were concentrated in the 50s/60s/70s. Toronto was kind of like a provincial backwater. Then there was a lot of nationalist unrest in Quebec in the 1970s, threats of secession and so on. Well the banks had enough and basically uniformly relocated to Toronto in the late 70s/early 80s. There is now an enormous difference in how the cities have developed, where the wealth is concentrated, etc.