Paul the Wolf
Score Predictions Competition Organiser
Apart from not legally having to adopt the Euro, the UK don't meet the criteria to be able to join the Euro even if they wanted to.
Apart from not legally having to adopt the Euro, the UK don't meet the criteria to be able to join the Euro even if they wanted to.
Apart from not legally having to adopt the Euro, the UK don't meet the criteria to be able to join the Euro even if they wanted to.
The likes of Greece didn't either. And some that did then have broken the rules since. Then again, who cares.
Better leave before we do meet the criteria![]()
Yes, a part of the territory doesn't use the Euro, French Polynesia. It's an interesting trivia because it's never mentioned, in France we technically have two currencies the Euro and the Franc Pacific.
I'd say it's the other way round. In theory we were supposed to join. In practise it was never going to happen. Has anyone suggested such a thing in the last, what, 15 years? I honestly don't remember reading a single article, or hearing a single speech, that made any reference to the UK joining the euro. I'm not challenging you to dig one out, I'm sure you can if you look hard enough, but this is not any kind of sustained pressure. There was no expectation. Didn't that bullshit renegotiation Cameron did even set in stone that we wouldn't be railroaded into any kind of ever closer union?
I'll tell you what it is, it's Project Fear. "Vote Leave or we'll have to join the euro." it's bollocks.
Apart from not legally having to adopt the Euro, the UK don't meet the criteria to be able to join the Euro even if they wanted to.
For sure, the only ones who care are those using this as one of the pretences for leaving.
Quite.
If the UK does jump off the cliff they'll probably wish they had joined the Euro.
Current open border is fine. I really doubt any EU national even Bulgarians and Romanians (no disrespect meant to them) will be looking to work illegally in the UK. As long as the Irish are not a part of the Schengen it all works fine.
The only problem I could see potentially arising would be if some EU country decided to hand out their citizenship to the recent mass arrivals and they started coming to the UK via Ireland illegally. The chances of this are minute and given that there are more than 1.5 million illegals in the UK already, the problem would still be small.
Yeah my post was assuming there being tariff free trade post UK leaving.The greater issue is that an open border on one side will be vulnerable to what essentially amounts to goods smuggling. If tariffs are to be applied or standards diverge then having no customs checks will leave both sides exposed. Something I doubt the EU are likely to agree to.
Sorry, I thought it was you that mentioned it. Now it's got to us wanting to join the Euro the conversation's got a bit too bizarre for me, I'll try again tomorrow. Still, at least you didn't say begging, which seems to have come back in vogue again, even without devilish.
Dealing with the easy part first. Whilst this is true what you so conveniently fail to say is that the only reason for this is because the currency of French Polynesia is permanently fixed against the Euro.
If you really think its pie in the sky and will not happen then I respectfully suggest that you are just as misguided and ill informed as those in favour of leaving that you evidently despise.
It might be an ideal for the EU in a general sense but it is pie in the sky in any meaningful sense. Even if we didn't leave we woudn't adopt the Euro in any meaningful time scale. The same goes for an EU army. Personally I'm for both in a general sense.
The expectation of the EU has always been that all countries would join the Euro and that the UK and Denmarks opt outs were only ever viewed as temporary. In the case of the UK black wednesday made our politicians rightly cautious. The collapse of economies in 2008 only reinforced our view that monetary union was at best unwise and that there ought to be a slowdown on further integration. The EU actually took and still takes the opposite view. The Greek experience for example has convinced them that without further political and economic integration the same might happen in the future. Personally I think they are right and that the EU's aim for all countries to adopt the Euro, for fiscal policy to be set centrally, for there to be a European army etc is not only sensible but almost a prerequisite if Europe is to have a real voice in years to come. Unless it happens then I am sure that long term the Union has no viable future.
If you really think its pie in the sky and will not happen then I respectfully suggest that you are just as misguided and ill informed as those in favour of leaving that you evidently despise.
Yeah my post was assuming there being tariff free trade post UK leaving.
Seems like a novel way of saying they will subsidise businesses that lose out due to tarrifs.Quite. Meanwhile, genius John Redwood suggests taxing UK consumers buying European goods, in order to refund ... UK consumers. Of course this financial merry go round is cost free and 100% of the proceeds goes back to those who paid the taxes in the first place.
Quite. Meanwhile, genius John Redwood suggests taxing UK consumers buying European goods, in order to refund ... UK consumers. Of course this financial merry go round is cost free and 100% of the proceeds goes back to those who paid the taxes in the first place.
Seems like a novel way of saying they will subsidise businesses that lose out due to tarrifs.
By charging their customers more? Seems a self defeating process.
I think that he is right. If I'm not mistaken the idea is to give the tarrifs paid by EU companies to UK based companies trading with the EU, basically subsidies.
I think that he is right. If I'm not mistaken the idea is to give the tarrifs paid by EU companies to UK based companies trading with the EU, basically subsidies.
The subsidies part, not the scheme. I knew that I wasn't clear at all.![]()
You really think they care for UK consumers. Bet most tories mps would have rubbed one out when the £ fell.But the UK customers are the ones who will be paying the tariffs on anything coming in. And EU businesses buying from the UK will just shift custom to other EU countries, so we'd better save those subsidies for unemployment benefits for the UK workers instead.
You really think they care for UK consumers. Bet most tories mps would have rubbed one out when the £ fell.
Yes but , see my previous post, there is no money, the UK consumers pay the tariffs and the government supposedly pays it back again and it will cost a lot to process this money that doesn't really exist.
I was talking about AshfordLad being right concerning subsidies, I just botched the all thing.
Saying it out loud would be counter productive now wouldn't it.Redwood doesn't mention subsidies for businesses. Just tax cuts and benefits raises for consumers. Who pay the tariffs in the first place.
Also note his use of 'could'. About as binding as 'let's fund our NHS instead.'
Why are you for the Euro? Aren't the UK in a better position with the Pound Sterling?
In a general sense I'd like the EU become more like a single country of federated states over time.
When you said you didn't get your information from the Daily Express, this makes things more clear - on the same site
Some examples - "just in" - "Muslims riot in Brussels" this is about Morocco's World Cup qualification over a week ago
or maybe - "Second migrant wave to Europe Immanent" with a picture similar to Farage's famous one - at least you would have thought they could spell imminent
Looks like Spain might be approaching a crisis over funding it's pensions:
http://investmentwatchblog.com/will-spain-be-the-first-to-default-on-pensions/
So it's shoot the messenger rather than comment on the message.
So lets comment on the another thing that was in the mainstream press about what the ECB tried to do recently to Italy when several of its banks were in trouble, it instructed those banks to seize retail customer deposits to support the Banks' capital shortfall. Italy found that politically unacceptable and instead against ECB rules supported those banks via State help.
This suggests to me big problems are brewing financially in the EU that are going to flare up at some point down the line as individual countries are trapped within EU rules that are not flexible enough for their economies. A major known one is devaluation which cannot be done.
I counted a full six stories of financial doom on their front page. Why pick the one you did, why not this one (http://investmentwatchblog.com/we-a...-credit-default-cycle-in-our-nations-history/), surely a lot more relevant to brexit then some Spanish pensions!? Or this one: http://investmentwatchblog.com/bank...flash-crash-in-early-2018-seems-quite-likely/ We could also go straight nutter and choose this one: http://investmentwatchblog.com/proof-uranium-one-was-involved-in-the-oregon-standoff/
.
How is Detroit ever going to rebound if it is shackled to the same dollar as Silicon Valley? How can the Bronx ever get by next to Manhattan without devaluing it's currency? Fiscal union you say? Look at reality I say, there is very little to show of a fiscal union between Michigan, Ohio and say California.
Check out @BBCNews’s Tweet:
The land of milk and honey just got downgraded to bread and water.
Everyone knows that. But you have to pick a reasonable sounding number to start off with, then we can all sit back and watch the cost of it inevitably escalate once we get past the point where anyone can point out this probably isnt value for money after all.£3bn won't be remotely enough to implement that automated border they're blabbing on about.
£3bn won't be remotely enough to implement that automated border they're blabbing on about.