There was no rethinking of the economy however - Brexit will force many changes on people - and we will have to start being a manufacturing economy again
True. But last year, 40% of electricity was generated by nuclear and renewable energy - this is going up year on year. I expect that 2016 will show that most of electricity is non-carbon powered. When Hinkley comes on board this will be higher still. Companies will have to think more broadly: there's a massive amount of geothermal energy in Iceland and they've just started marketing that to datacentre providers in the rest of Europe - that's about 2% of our power demands.
We're about 76% self-sufficient as it is, it wouldn't take a huge amount of effort to boost that higher. We will able to target farming subsidies better - they go on farming land, not on food production at the moment. I'm not convinced that we will get a reduction in migration - I certainly hope not. I voted out of the EU but approve of free movement
Really?
http://www.forbes.com/sites/realspin/2016/06/22/brexit-economic-case/#7174231f374b
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2016/jun/22/the-uk-economy-will-perform-better-outside-the-eu
http://www.vox.com/2016/6/21/11974600/brexit-eu-euro-disaster
I'm certainly not saying it's going to be easy and it's going to be less easy if the headbangers in the Tories get their way. To lose financial passporting would be a big problem for the economy and to halt migration would be even worse. The benefits will be seen in the long term - there will be short term pain - but it entails rethinking about the way we live, we work, we travel and we eat. But it's only going to be a disaster if we want it to be
Do you want your children to be fruit pickers when they grow up?