Ubik
Nothing happens until something moves!
- Joined
- Jul 8, 2010
- Messages
- 19,133
"Ancient man had it right"

I guess the link is freedom of movement of goods, services and people. You'd rather be inside the world's biggest trading bloc than outside.
Every country naturally has some degree of border control to manage costs and resources as much as anything.
Don't worry, that's part of the conditions that India want to do a trade deal with the UK, as does Australia and more than likely African countries as well. In other words nothing would change , just the nationality of the people.
"Ancient man had it right"![]()
Yes but not 100% of the people affected
Ok........I'd like to larff myself but dont get it?
Chuckling at you moving the goalposts. "2 tory pms in a row stick to promises" indeed.Ok........I'd like to larff myself but dont get it?
FCBforever....
Like I said last time - you really are an insulting little twat, aren't you.
As many people have said the past few hundred years - it's easy to love Germany, just difficult to love arrogant germans.
Edted to add that I just showed your post to my wife.
She's German.
And she agrees with me.
The Germans are arrogant. The English are arrogant AND ignorant!
I'm English btw.
Currently watching yesterday's French presidential debate - still 45 minutes to go but something that would appeal to @Stanley Road - Le Pen says the UK are doing wonderfully well since Brexit and guess what the other 4 said - "They haven't left yet!!"![]()
Only the English ? Not the Scots, the Welsh and the Northern Irish ?
And she also said ( in fact the first thing that she said ) was that she wanted to be the President of France - not Frau Fatarse's deputy.
You are just about to get rid of a hopeless man, why not try a hopeless woman?Yes but if she does become President of France we may as well all give up now, a hopeless woman
You are just about to get rid of a hopeless man, why not try a hopeless woman?
No, what I mean is that the short term effects were predicted by every man and his dog in the field of economics to be far worse than they have proven to be. That is why people have become sceptical of the 'doomongers' economic predictions on the matter.
Personally I expect a significant economic downturn in the next 2-5 years but find the predictions that the U.K. will been doomed long term and will have to go back to the EU cap in hand one day to be fanciful.
I am also hopeful that we will come away with a reasonable agreement with the EU by the end of the two years but worry that politics could scupper that.
The economic effects caused by the Brexit vote so far can be considered worse than predicted because we're still in the EU and have already suffered for considering leaving.
Inflation up to 2.3% which is beyond Bank's 2% forecasted target. It was 0.5% before the vote. Sharp increase in less than 8 months. Most experts believe that it will go beyond 3% this coming year.
What is holding most things slightly together is a hope of a similar deal and if that doesn't happen then I'd say all those nightmares scenarios of doom and gloom that were predicted before the vote will look quite rosy in comparison to what will actually happen.
https://www.ft.com/content/1a9dac92-d7da-11e6-944b-e7eb37a6aa8e
One of hundreds of articles that I could link to back up what I said.
The figures will feed into the debate about the strength of the British economy since the referendum on membership of the EU. Most data suggest that increased uncertainty has not led to a slowdown.
An lot of the resilience the economy has shown post the brexit vote is linked to consumer spending which will slow due to rising inflation and stagnating wages.
The key thing in that article is the final two paragraphs which tie in with what I said that we're only in the uncertainty phase and there is clearly an impact. Once we leave and we know what is happening it will get much much worse if we don't get a good deal with the no deal option touted by May being catastrophic.
An lot of the resilience the economy has shown post the brexit vote is linked to consumer spending which will slow due to rising inflation and stagnating wages.
The key thing in that article is the final two paragraphs which tie in with what I said that we're only in the uncertainty phase and there is clearly an impact. Once we leave and we know what is happening it will get much much worse if we don't get a good deal with the no deal option touted by May being catastrophic.
My whole point was about the initial impact of Brexit being erroneously forecast by numerous experts. I didn't reference what you could call the second phase of Brexit or what you could call the third phase of Brexit - BR-EXIT.
This is a genuine question and I may well have missed it but did a large bloc of people really claim that our economy would collapse as soon as we voted to leave?
Literally nothing has changed. Nothing will change when we trigger article 50 either. We'll still be trading with the EU, under the same rules, sdame regulations etc.
Surely we need to actually wait until we leave and see what the deal looks like (a reasonable deal or some crazys' dreams of commonwealth, anglophile bloc, WTO rules trade deal etc) before we can say what impact Brexit will have on the economy?
This is a genuine question and I may well have missed it but did a large bloc of people really claim that our economy would collapse as soon as we voted to leave?
Literally nothing has changed. Nothing will change when we trigger article 50 either. We'll still be trading with the EU, under the same rules, sdame regulations etc.
Surely we need to actually wait until we leave and see what the deal looks like (a reasonable deal or some crazys' dreams of commonwealth, anglophile bloc, WTO rules trade deal etc) before we can say what impact Brexit will have on the economy?
Yes, there will be a bit short-term disruption and some risks about the financial industry, but the crucial factor (ironically) might be the new immigration regime. Currently migration might help the UK much more than I initially thought and much more than it helps other countries (when the measurement is both GDP and GDPperCapita growth). Free migration really seems to be what makes the major difference. So when the UK government accepts a migration regime, that accommodates the needs of the economy, Brexit won’t change a lot (but the UK will also not reduced migration…). If May is hell-bend on reducing absolute numbers in a significant way, the impact might be quite substantial. I don’t want to put a number on it, but that could be surprisingly brutal.
My whole point was about the initial impact of Brexit being erroneously forecast by numerous experts. I didn't reference what you could call the second phase of Brexit or what you could call the third phase of Brexit - BR-EXIT.
Again the models were based on us falling off a cliff as in we have the referendum and we're out all ties cut.
that is just not true.Again the models were based on us falling off a cliff as in we have the referendum and we're out all ties cut. They did not account for this period that we are in now. The models can very much become wholly true if we do end up with no deal.
So in a way we're in purgatory and whether we're going to heaven or hell is going to depend on the deal we can achieve.
Come on, do you not think the EU commission know how leaving the EU works?
Why would economists take the blame for these erroneous predictions if they were due to factors out of their hands?
From FT survey.
Clearly most of the short term forecasts were too pessimistic and the immediate shock has been much smaller than expected.
While I got the short-term Brexit impact badly wrong, I continue to think that the long-term impact of Brexit will have a modest negative impact on the LEVEL of income.
that is just not true.
1: Read these papers
2: ???
3: Profit!
Just a couple of unrelated facts:
- 6,1% of the working age population in the UK is from other parts of the EU. 10,8% from the rest of the world; overall 3,3m EU nationals live in Britain, while 5,4 migrants from the rest of the world.
- When it comes to individual countries of migrants, Poland and India are leading by quite some distance, followed by Pakistan, Ireland, Germany, Romania and Bangladesh.
- Germany, Norway, Ireland, Belgium, Austria, Switzerland all have higher % shares of EU foreigners as part of their working-age population. (Switzerland has 18,6% from the EU and 14,8% from the rest of the world!)
- The UK and Norway are the only two countries in the EU28, where foreigners are much more likely to be employed compared to the native population.
- Spain > Ireland > France > Germany > Italy > Netherlands > Cyprus > Poland are the countries with most UK migrants
Norway are not in the EU28 - so the UK are the only one, wonder where the fault lies.
true. I wanted to include both Norway and Switzerland, because they are part of the single market. Looking at their migrant population, it puts the notion to rest that being outside the EU but in the single market would be a viable option for people who want less migrants.
My first guess would be that migrants are on average more qualified than the domestic population in these two countries.
The Swiss don't have financial services passporting rights, from what I seem to remember though?true. I wanted to include both Norway and Switzerland, because they are part of the single market. Looking at their migrant population, it puts the notion to rest that being outside the EU but in the single market would be a viable option for people who want less migrants.
My first guess would be that migrants are on average more qualified than the domestic population in these two countries.
they don't. Their banks usually access the single market via subsidiaries in London.The Swiss don't have financial services passporting rights, from what I seem to remember though?