sten_super
Brain Surgeon
So the cost of filling in a few forms will destroy the EU as an export market? Sorry I don't buy that.
I don't buy it either.
Which is why I said 'for example'. It's one example, it's a pretty trivial one, but it's one amongst many (and it doesn't rely on tariffs and quotas, which are the biggest trade barriers but also those that a post-Brexit UK would do the most to avoid facing). There is huge amounts of evidence that trade barriers are bad for trade, and bad for economic growth, and moving from a free market to anything less than that will involve more barriers to trade.
My view on this is rather like the Scottish referendum - that 'Out' would be much more convincing if they established a clear and honest position (e.g. "We don't want a Norway-style relationship, we want complete sovereignty, and we accept that will mean barriers to trade with the EU, and some short-term pain, but the long-term economic gains are stronger domestic industries, the removal of red tape and freedom to set our own rules, all of which should bolster productivity and competitiveness") rather than trying to be all things to all men ("There is no economic downside", "We will have a Norway-style relationship", "We will regain control of our own immigration policy") without any coherence.