gregbrighton
New member
It would be madness if we left the EU. Stay in and help fight Britain's corner!
It would be madness if we left the EU. Stay in and help fight Britain's corner!
It would be madness if we left the EU. Stay in and help fight Britain's corner!
Exactly. The EU institutions are not there for the people. It's there for the rich elite to manipulate the politicians to serve their own financial interests and line their own pockets.
We need to take control of our own borders and make our own laws without Brussels looking over our shoulder.
UK out of EU. Scotland out of UK. Perfick!
Well here it is - the coup de grâce
Treasury claims – The headline figure
The Treasury looked at three different scenarios for Brexit, each with different levels of tariffs and different predicted drops to economic growth. Here are the key forecasts for each.
1) The Norway option
What is it: Britain would remain part of the European Economic Area, like Norway, with access to the single market but still have to accept certain EU rules like free movement and directives agreed in Brussels.
GDP: 3.8% lower (than if UK stayed in EU).
Annual cost per household: £2,600
Annual lost tax revenues: £20bn
2) The Canada option
What is it: Britain would sign a bilateral free trade agreement with the EU, like the one Canada has negotiated – an example cited by Boris Johnson, the London Mayor, as a possible option.
GDP: 6.2% lower (than if UK stayed in EU).
Annual cost per household: £4,300
Annual lost tax revenue: £36bn
3) The World Trade Organisation option
What is it: Britain would not sign a standalone trade deal with the EU but instead rely tariff levels set by the World Trade Organistion.
GDP: 7.5% lower (than if UK stayed in EU).
Annual cost per household: £5,200
Annual lost tax revenue: £45bn
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/201...easury-forecasts/?cid=sf24558416&sf24558416=1
Well here it is - the coup de grâce
Treasury claims – The headline figure
The Treasury looked at three different scenarios for Brexit, each with different levels of tariffs and different predicted drops to economic growth. Here are the key forecasts for each.
1) The Norway option
What is it: Britain would remain part of the European Economic Area, like Norway, with access to the single market but still have to accept certain EU rules like free movement and directives agreed in Brussels.
GDP: 3.8% lower (than if UK stayed in EU).
Annual cost per household: £2,600
Annual lost tax revenues: £20bn
2) The Canada option
What is it: Britain would sign a bilateral free trade agreement with the EU, like the one Canada has negotiated – an example cited by Boris Johnson, the London Mayor, as a possible option.
GDP: 6.2% lower (than if UK stayed in EU).
Annual cost per household: £4,300
Annual lost tax revenue: £36bn
3) The World Trade Organisation option
What is it: Britain would not sign a standalone trade deal with the EU but instead rely tariff levels set by the World Trade Organistion.
GDP: 7.5% lower (than if UK stayed in EU).
Annual cost per household: £5,200
Annual lost tax revenue: £45bn
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/201...easury-forecasts/?cid=sf24558416&sf24558416=1
listen to your other self once in a while
listen to your other self once in a while
Osborne is a nasty venomous man along with the nasty venomous Conservative Party.
It's a terrible, terrible prospect from the esteemed trustworthy chancellor.
George Osborne says income tax would go up 8p under a Brexit! I mean who would seriously want that? Families hit by losing £4.5k would surely struggle with a tax rise like that!
http://www.theguardian.com/politics...-will-cost-families-4300-a-year-politics-live
jumping the shark with that, 15 years of inflation and GDC rises will need a 8p increase? or thats just a comparison in todays money for a cost of £36bn. i'm surprised by the sudden support for Mr Osborne, maybe we can look down the sofa again.
I don't support Osborne. He is a nasty weasel but I do take notice of the Treasury, in this instance.
I don't support Osborne. He is a nasty weasel but I do take notice of the Treasury, in this instance.
It would be madness if we left the EU. Stay in and help fight Britain's corner!
The UK will lose out if the hard-right convince the nation to retreat and isolate itself from our trading partners.
I say, engage with Europe and the World.
I changed my mind. What is more important? Keeping immigrants out and the 'sovereignty fantasy' or engaging in a modern world trading and building our economy within international frameworks? I say, engage with Europe and the World. The UK will lose out if the hard-right convince the nation to retreat and isolate itself from our trading partners.
"Just in the last week, we’ve had the IMF, we’ve had the monetary policy committee of the Bank of England, we’ve had the OECD, we’ve had businesses like Lloyds Bank, we’ve had academics come out and all say the same thing [Brexit would harm the economy.] I would say to those arguing we should leave, where is your document? Where is your assessment? Where is your economic analysis? Where is a single ally or trading partner or credible international organisation that thinks it is a good idea for Britain to leave the European Union?
yes. im saying that a) its not as much as they want you to think, b) ignores the normal margin of error in GDP predictions (see last autumns billions in the sofa) and c) excludes any increasing costs of being in the EU. its a small financial cost weighed up against ceding powers to a foreign government.
I'm no Osbourne fan, and I have some issues with the way that the Treasury has gone about this analysis, but this is a great line from the Chancellor.
Your point b), and I've seen it made by others as well, slightly mis-interprets the analysis. Analysing the difference between scenarios, versus analysing the actual levels themselves, was explained nicely by one of the FT writers on twitter.
edit to add: Robert Peston also has a decent (and accessible) write up of his thoughts on facebook here.
give your head a wobble FFS
regards
DR
If the IMF, the Bank of England and the treasury couldn't forecast the crash in 2008 and seem completely incapable of estimating anything farther out than three days I am struggling to believe that suddenly there is a concrete hang your hat on it prediction that we'll all be precisely £4,340 worse off par annum in four years time.
It is clearly ridiculous to predict something like this with such elan. Besides if we were ALL four grand worse off then at least we'd all be the same....oh, hang on, except for hose on the living wage who would proportionately far better off than the rest of us.