Post subject: Re: Time for the UK to get out of the EU?
Posted: Fri Jun 08, 2012 10:47 am
Kelvin's Ferret
Club Coach
Joined: Oct 08 2004 Posts: 7343 Location: East Surrey, England
To my knowledge there have been at least two formal cost benefit exercises on membershop initiated by The Treasury, one was cancelled by Ken Clarke and the other cancelled by Gordon Brown, it doesn't take a rocket scientist to work out why politicians might decide to do that. You have to bear in mind that the UK has been always been a net contributor since it joined, the only other country in that camp being Germany, so any talk of Nissan style investment has to be offset against billions annd billions in UK net subsidies to the EU year after year.
There is no real reason for the UK not to leave the EU and negotiate a free trade agreement 1) tit for tat customs spats do neither side any good (particularly as the UK runs a trade deficit with rest of EU), and 2) this is the era of of WTA and even the EU has to work with that. These are very heavy realpolitik counterbalance to worries about Nissan style investment leaving if we turn off the taps. If the UK is still part of a free trade zone, and is more competitive as a result, and they've already sunk billions in costs then it's unlikely. What business (like Nissan etc) doesn't like is uncertainty, but that is tough luck anywhere at the moment.
Talk of human rights, meat in sausages or cucumbers are p.iss weak red herrings, they are not dependent on the wider EU project with its bureaucracies, talking shops and corruption so deep and widespread nobody even bothers to bat an eyelid at it any longer. You can have institutions managing international trade regimes, providing aid to poor European countires, or promoting universal human rights standards, you don't need the trappings and cost of the EU for all that, in fact many such organisations already exist outside the EU. Trade does exist without the EU, and human rights actually existed in Britain before the Human Rights Act even if it wasn't around to justify a range of undesirable actions subsequently garishly splashed across the viewspapers, an expensive political integration project is not a pre-requisite for any of these things.
Now I appreciate all this realpolitik s.hit may not be as cuddly as 27 nations all proudly hugging each other under a flag of peace blah blah, but it's a moot point now anyway, the EU has already overstretched itself, it's pulling itself apart trying to maintain a common currency that doesn't work for half of it's members. If the Euro fails then what is the point of ever greater integration? The Germans are only really propping the whole thing up because their banks are so heavily exposed to the banks in weak economies (particularly Spain) that they'll have a banking meltdown if they exit. Afterall who will pay the German banks back what they lent to banks in Spain etc if the German people don't stump up the cash to keep the circle intact? Everyone is worried about a flight of capital out of the weaker economies into Germany if one of them exits, but what happens when Germany's banks start to take hits as a result of their losses from an exit? Gotta keep kicking that can along...
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Post subject: Re: Time for the UK to get out of the EU?
Posted: Fri Jun 08, 2012 10:48 am
Rooster Booster
International Chairman
Joined: Dec 22 2001 Posts: 7155 Location: Sydney 2000
Mintball wrote:And idiot shoppers too, who only ever want cod or haddock or a bit of skate, when we have extraordinarily rich seas all around these islands.
From memory the programme was about throwing dead fish back into the sea and not being able to sell it, thanks to EU regulations. I simply added an EU regulation that was bolloçks to the dear working folk (fishermen) back in blighty to the people's ridicules of ones that apparently are good.
Post subject: Re: Time for the UK to get out of the EU?
Posted: Fri Jun 08, 2012 10:56 am
Kelvin's Ferret
Club Coach
Joined: Oct 08 2004 Posts: 7343 Location: East Surrey, England
sally cinnamon wrote:What I fear will happen is Germany will lead calls for a fiscal union, so that it can keep on being inside the Euro which means it has a currency much undervalued compared to what the Deutschmark would be on its own, making German goods much cheaper in Euros than they would be in Deutchmarks hence Germany has a huge export advantage. But they will constantly complain about having to subsidise the others, and castigate them for having higher unemployment, lower productivity, and lecture them on how they need to have lower wages and conditions etc. Unless Germany is willing to accept the rough with the smooth of fiscal union it is not going to work.
Aside from whether the others will accept formally ceding control of their economies to Germany (even if they've already done so in practice), there is this suggestion that the German economy is going to soften later this year, and if this happens then the German people may get even more tectchy than they already are, and there are plenty who are not keen on Merkel repeatedly handing over their money to countries out of step with the German work ethic.
For contributions, remittances, payments, and all other matters of any responsibility, please refer to someone else.
“The British people love a good hero and a good hate” Lord Northcliffe
Post subject: Re: Time for the UK to get out of the EU?
Posted: Fri Jun 08, 2012 11:06 am
Him
International Board Member
Joined: Jun 19 2002 Posts: 14970 Location: Campaigning for a deep attacking line
The problem is the Germans aren't propping it up, they're trying to get everyone else to prop it up. They want the benefits (better for German exports) but don't want the costs (helping out the poorer areas). The Euro would work either if it was restricted to nations of similar size economies or if (like in nations outside the Euro) the rich areas subsidise the weak. Since the Germans don't appear to want either, it won't work.
As for the EU, I'm sure there is plenty of unnecessary and wasteful expenditure, but I'm of the school that you attempt to make something better before chucking it away entirely. I don't see why those parts can't be controlled with effective leadership (that does not include btching from the sidelines with no proposals only complaints). A big problem for the EU is that no one understands how it works. It needs simplifying and far greater transparency introduced. People are suspicious of things they don't understand. If there was greater transparency there would be greater understanding and therefore greater pressure brought to bear upon our European representatives. People barely know who their MP is but I think people at least know if theyre in a Tory or Labour constituency. Without looking, I have no idea who, or what party my regions' MEP's are from or even how many there are. And I'm at least somewhat interested in politics.
Post subject: Re: Time for the UK to get out of the EU?
Posted: Fri Jun 08, 2012 11:27 am
sally cinnamon
Club Coach
Joined: Oct 12 2004 Posts: 16271
Kelvin's Ferret wrote:Aside from whether the others will accept formally ceding control of their economies to Germany (even if they've already done so in practice), there is this suggestion that the German economy is going to soften later this year, and if this happens then the German people may get even more tectchy than they already are, and there are plenty who are not keen on Merkel repeatedly handing over their money to countries out of step with the German work ethic.
One thing I find interesting is that people often talk about the famous German work ethic but they work fewer hours than we do, the EU average weekly hours worked per worker is 37.4, Germany is 35.6 and the UK is 36.3. This includes part time and full time workers, if you view it just by full time then the EU average is 41.6, Germany is 42 and the UK is 42.7. On both counts the longest hours worked in Europe are in Greece although Greece has a high unemployment rate so that partly explains that one.
Germany's strength comes from its high productivity, 23.7% higher than the EU average, whereas we are 7.2% higher than the EU average, Greece is 23.7% lower than the EU average, and also its export advantage being able to export quality goods at cheap price because it has an undervalued exchange rate by being in the Euro rather than the exchange rate they would have in the Deutschmark.
Germany has quite good pensions, employment rights and social welfare, the right wingers often hold Germany up as a benchmark of austerity but they have achieved their high levels of productivity through strong state investment in education and infrastructure and also support for industry, it is not through cutting taxes to the rich to the lowest possible level to attract investment and having low wages and no working rights to make them competitive...
Kelvin's Ferret wrote:Aside from whether the others will accept formally ceding control of their economies to Germany (even if they've already done so in practice), there is this suggestion that the German economy is going to soften later this year, and if this happens then the German people may get even more tectchy than they already are, and there are plenty who are not keen on Merkel repeatedly handing over their money to countries out of step with the German work ethic.
One thing I find interesting is that people often talk about the famous German work ethic but they work fewer hours than we do, the EU average weekly hours worked per worker is 37.4, Germany is 35.6 and the UK is 36.3. This includes part time and full time workers, if you view it just by full time then the EU average is 41.6, Germany is 42 and the UK is 42.7. On both counts the longest hours worked in Europe are in Greece although Greece has a high unemployment rate so that partly explains that one.
Germany's strength comes from its high productivity, 23.7% higher than the EU average, whereas we are 7.2% higher than the EU average, Greece is 23.7% lower than the EU average, and also its export advantage being able to export quality goods at cheap price because it has an undervalued exchange rate by being in the Euro rather than the exchange rate they would have in the Deutschmark.
Germany has quite good pensions, employment rights and social welfare, the right wingers often hold Germany up as a benchmark of austerity but they have achieved their high levels of productivity through strong state investment in education and infrastructure and also support for industry, it is not through cutting taxes to the rich to the lowest possible level to attract investment and having low wages and no working rights to make them competitive...
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