Scunner
Active member
Hmmm...this is a really vexed question for me as I am somewhat undecided. It's one of those head and heart questions that, in reality, have no 'correct' answer. I think if the proverbial gun were held to my head I would vote out. My reasoning for this is that I think the British people are naturally creative, free thinking, liberal and yet also Eurosceptic. We are so because being part of the EU restricts freedom of choice and is fundamentally undemocratic.
Years ago I was in the offices of Gartner, who are a large American firm that specialises in statistics and information. They calculated that of the 5000 or so large US Corporates that had a European or EMEA head office, 4000 of these were in the UK. This has occurred naturally through the security they feel by being based in an English language speaking country. The choice/worry is: will we leverage that advantage or risk it by leaving Europe?
I think we can leverage it by public sector reform, education reform, structural investment in public services and corporate tax incentives that we would not otherwise be able to offer while remaining in the EU. Witness the EU vs Google/Facebook/Apple et al tax storm that is approaching...
Yes, we want those companies to pay tax, but Ireland has realised it benefits their economy more to have 1000's of people in work rather than claiming benefits, and thus paying income tax, than it would do by disincentivising large US companies from basing themselves in Ireland through high corporate tax charges.
On to globalisation: the shrinking of the world in technology terms, means that a flexible and reformed social economy like the UK's would be positioned very well to cope with the demands of a tertiary, service industry based exchange of trade and money. Less regulation, especially in the financial markets, could mean that the UK's trusted financial services houses expand rapidly with greater flexibility and entrepreneurial spirit.
In fact, while typing this, I have come to the conclusion that the one thing humans fear more than anything else is change...the fear of the unknown. And that's the only argument that the 'IN' campaign will be peddling. They will prey on uncertainty and the fear of change. We should be stronger than that and face up to the future without being afraid of the consequences but it will be essential to invest and embrace the reforms that will be necessary to compete on a global stage. Do that and we will be fine, just look at the mess surrounding the Schengen agreement announced today...do we really want to remain part of such an unwieldy nonsense?
Years ago I was in the offices of Gartner, who are a large American firm that specialises in statistics and information. They calculated that of the 5000 or so large US Corporates that had a European or EMEA head office, 4000 of these were in the UK. This has occurred naturally through the security they feel by being based in an English language speaking country. The choice/worry is: will we leverage that advantage or risk it by leaving Europe?
I think we can leverage it by public sector reform, education reform, structural investment in public services and corporate tax incentives that we would not otherwise be able to offer while remaining in the EU. Witness the EU vs Google/Facebook/Apple et al tax storm that is approaching...
Yes, we want those companies to pay tax, but Ireland has realised it benefits their economy more to have 1000's of people in work rather than claiming benefits, and thus paying income tax, than it would do by disincentivising large US companies from basing themselves in Ireland through high corporate tax charges.
On to globalisation: the shrinking of the world in technology terms, means that a flexible and reformed social economy like the UK's would be positioned very well to cope with the demands of a tertiary, service industry based exchange of trade and money. Less regulation, especially in the financial markets, could mean that the UK's trusted financial services houses expand rapidly with greater flexibility and entrepreneurial spirit.
In fact, while typing this, I have come to the conclusion that the one thing humans fear more than anything else is change...the fear of the unknown. And that's the only argument that the 'IN' campaign will be peddling. They will prey on uncertainty and the fear of change. We should be stronger than that and face up to the future without being afraid of the consequences but it will be essential to invest and embrace the reforms that will be necessary to compete on a global stage. Do that and we will be fine, just look at the mess surrounding the Schengen agreement announced today...do we really want to remain part of such an unwieldy nonsense?