All things seem to be on the up for the UK despite, or should that be because of, Brexit.
From Capital & Conflict
Politics is a fickle creature. So it’s no surprise that Brexit is especially fickle.
In the US, the Democrats and Republicans did an ideology swap at the turn of the 20th century. In Australia, the so called Liberal Party is conservative. The Liberal Democrats lived up to neither name here in the UK.
In this tradition, Brexit went haywire last week. Everyone seems to have reversed their position on the issue.
Nigel Farage pondered a second referendum. Putting the issue beyond doubt is his aim. Along with making some sort of return to the national stage, I suspect.
The strongest argument that Remain campaigners had was the economic implosion of the UK in the wake of the Brexit vote. But with news like this hitting the tapes at Reuters in the last few days, those fears are now gone:
Manufacturers recorded their fastest annual growth since March 2011 in the three months to the end of November, expanding by 3.9 percent year-on-year.
The sector, which accounts for around a tenth of British economic output, also posted its seventh consecutive monthly expansion - the longest unbroken run in more than 20 years.
The National Institute of Economic and Social Research (NIESR) said the figures pointed to GDP growth of 0.6 percent in the last quarter of 2017, which would be the strongest of the year and would lift full-year growth to 1.8 percent.
“There was strong and widespread growth across (British) manufacturing with notable increases from renewable energy projects, boats, planes and cars for export,� ONS statistician Ole Black said.
Goods export volumes in the three months to November were 9.1 percent higher than the same period in 2016 […]
>From boats to wind power, Britain’s economy is following the Brexit script nicely. The pound has recovered half its referendum losses against the US dollar. The stockmarket is finally surging ahead of the 2000 high. Unemployment is low. Property markets outside of London dominate the tables of price increases.
Source: The Telegraph
Nigel is far from alone when it comes to changing his mind. My favourite Brexit reversal story so far is this one from the Financial Times. The French are coming for Brexit. One of their biggest banks is looking to expand here:
BNP Paribas aims to capitalise on the disruption of Brexit to gain market share in UK corporate and investment banking and has drawn up aggressive plans to attract business from mid-sized British companies.
So much for Brexit’s doom for the city.
Next on the list of about faces is the extension of the Brexit deadline. For years the two-year deadline in Article 50 has been in the news. They call it the cliff edge.
And for years I’ve been explaining why this is simply incorrect. You’ve heard lots about Article 50. But if you’d actually read it, you’d discover something surprising. Sub-section three details the deadline by which a nation must leave the EU after giving notice:
The Treaties shall cease to apply to the State in question from the date of entry into force of the withdrawal agreement or, failing that, two years after the notification referred to in paragraph 2, unless the European Council, in agreement with the Member State concerned, unanimously decides to extend this period.
In other words, the deadline is not a deadline. Unless someone in the EU council decides to make it one by refusing an extension. The thing is, this is not in their interest. And so now the deadline everyone has been assuming is falling apart.
EU states are realising that their vision for Brexit can’t be completed quickly. It takes the EU years to negotiate trade deals. And so countries are keen to abandon the previously ironclad two-year time constraint. Ireland’s foreign minister suggested a five-year transition. Hungary is advocating an extension clause too, as though there isn’t one already in Article 50.
Sceptics reckon this is all to do with the need for Britain to continue contributing to the EU budget. The 2019 EU elections are coming and the EU won’t be a nice place without British money.
Or perhaps a slower Brexit increases the probability of the UK abandoning Brexit altogether. That’s unlikely given the propensity of the EU to mess itself up over time. Nothing backs Brexit like a dysfunctional EU.
Another reversal in the making is that the EU will have to become a protectionist agitator if it wants to reduce trade and financial ties to the UK as part of Brexit. Britain wants trade, the EU says it can’t have it outside the EU. But to shut down trade will be committing the sort of offences that they’ve lambasted none other than Donald Trump for. They’ll be following in his footsteps.
Not that this would be unusual for the protectionist bloc that is the EU, with its extraordinary high tariffs under the World Trade Organisation.
The good news is that each nation inside the EU is realising what an end to trade would mean for their economies. And so they’re all reversing their hard stances on the future trade deal too.
Even the antagonistic Spanish are supposedly pushing for a Brexit which keeps Britain close. The country’s economy minister has done the maths and realised he can’t afford anything else. Especially given how much Spain stands to lose in an EU budget without Britain according to its own economists’ report. The Guardian summed it up:
It says Brexit will see Spain’s GDP fall by between €2bn and €4bn, force the country to increase its EU budget contributions by €888m, and could result in some regions losing their European funding.
News that the Spanish and Dutch are interested in an accommodative Brexit sent the pound surging over 1% recently – a big move in currency markets.
Italy’s economy minister agreed with his Dutch and Spanish counterparts. He wants the “Canada plus plus plus� deal that David Davis suggests. Something the EU considers impossible. It’ll have to change its stance after its member states do.
Even the Remainers’ darkest desires seem to have turned on them. An EU study confirmed it’s unclear Britain can legally reverse Brexit now, contradicting earlier published opinions.
When it comes to Brexit, nothing is settled and everyone is changing their minds. Is there a method to the madness?
Within 5-10 years, people will realise Brexit was the least of our challenges, resource scarcity, climate change and a escalating collapse of the international order.
Within 5-10 years, people will realise Brexit was the least of our challenges, resource scarcity, climate change and a escalating collapse of the international order.
It is not a challenge as much as it is a decision about how you will face all those future problems including some that are not yet apparent. Will you be better off tied to the bureaucracy in Brussels or on your own able to make decisions based on what is best for the UK? Dose being part of a large union grant you protection and access to support from the other members or leave you at the mercy of the larger players controlling the leadership of that union?
vtsnowedin wrote:....Does being part of a large union grant you protection and access to support from the other members or leave you at the mercy of the larger players controlling the leadership of that union?
It is the latter of these. The EU has become the German domination of Europe by other means
vtsnowedin wrote:Will you be better off tied to the bureaucracy in Brussels or on your own able to make decisions based on what is best for the UK?
That's an interesting question and the obvious answer would be "independence, decisions based on what is best for the UK!". However there's a risk that when a whole bunch of nations take that approach the outcome is worse than when that same bunch of nations form alliances, agreement, unions etc.
Mass migration fuelled by climate change and resource scarcity will be a major factor and having a minimum of 20 miles of usually choppy water between us and them is an advantage that we need to hang onto. The ability to say no to further overcrowding of our island is something that we have to hang onto at all costs.
As far as the economy goes we have to remove our addiction to growth which is what makes that same economy addicted to immigration. By 2050 world population should be stable so we would then be robbing third world countries of the people that build those economies, if you buy the argument that increasing population is essential for a healthy economy, so why shouldn't we wean ourselves off the drug of expansion before then.
We should be training our own health service workers; we should be training our own farm workers; engineers; scientists. If we had a full set of free training schemes we would be able to accept, no, we would encourage, productivity increases in some industries so that those workers could be trained for work elsewhere.
That is always assuming that the world economy hasn't collapsed by then in which case we will need to be training an awful lot of people in organic food growing on the basis that one person without any fossil fuel input can grow enough food to feed one and a half people.
kenneal - lagger wrote:Mass migration fuelled by climate change and resource scarcity will be a major factor and having a minimum of 20 miles of usually choppy water between us and them is an advantage that we need to hang onto. The ability to say no to further overcrowding of our island is something that we have to hang onto at all costs.
As far as the economy goes we have to remove our addiction to growth which is what makes that same economy addicted to immigration. By 2050 world population should be stable so we would then be robbing third world countries of the people that build those economies, if you buy the argument that increasing population is essential for a healthy economy, so why shouldn't we wean ourselves off the drug of expansion before then.
We should be training our own health service workers; we should be training our own farm workers; engineers; scientists. If we had a full set of free training schemes we would be able to accept, no, we would encourage, productivity increases in some industries so that those workers could be trained for work elsewhere.
That is always assuming that the world economy hasn't collapsed by then in which case we will need to be training an awful lot of people in organic food growing on the basis that one person without any fossil fuel input can grow enough food to feed one and a half people.
I agree with all of this, however successive UK governments have allowed / encouraged immigration both from within and outside of the EU for a couple of decades. Following brexit there will be fewer people coming from the EU but more coming from the Indian sub-continent. I don't believe anything will change with regard to net immigration numbers.
Free training for health service workers etc. is massively important for the future but the current shower in charge seem intent on making training more expensive. I suspect that scrapping bursaries for nurses is part of the long term plan to privatise the NHS.
Yep. I think it is as simple and as stupid as that at heart. But, it is further exacerbated by a complicit liberal bourgeoisie who have got themselves tied up in knots with empire guilt. It's basically the end of the current civilizational system and the running out of new ideas. The system is eating itself and all of the upside down cultural and political phenomena we are seeing are ultimately the consequences of that.
Oswald Spengler was right. This is how it ends. Contradictions, confusion, chaos and collapse.
Last edited by Little John on 22 Jan 2018, 16:03, edited 2 times in total.
careful_eugene wrote:
I agree with all of this, however successive UK governments have allowed / encouraged immigration both from within and outside of the EU for a couple of decades..
They were given preferential employment in transport and the NHS. The public never wanted it - just the sons of Normans. Easier than offering the regional dirt employment in London, and destined/designed to drive housing cost.
The UK economy has been addicted to immigration since the early fifties. At that time the population of the UK was about 40 million and beginning to fall with a birthrate below replacement. Since then it has risen to over 60 million. A bit of arithmetic, not even maths, shows that the current population of the UK is at least 30% migrants and descendants of migrants. That equates to an average increase of over 300,000 per year, some of which will be children born here of immigrants. If you take the 330,000 net migration that we have received for the last ten years or so then add on their children born here the population will be rising at well over the net immigration rate.
Is it any wonder that the NHS is having problems? Is it any wonder that there is a housing crisis with housing costs at record levels and still rising? That increase in GDP is certainly not finding its way to those at the bottom of the pile, it is being creamed off by the housing industry, banks and the rented housing sector. Industry, especially the building industry, is also profiting by the lower wages engendered by an increasing supply of workers many of whom are already trained, so adding to the saving. This also saves the NHS a fortune as they don't have to spend so much training nurses and doctors as they can imported them ready trained.
In view of the problems that we are about to face from climate change including an increasingly precarious food supply from a falling land area this deliberate policy of uncontrolled population increase is suicidal. It only needs a few extreme weather events in the next few years to cause a years famine across the globe and where will the UK stand then? We import 50% of our food! Food banks won't be a lot of use then as there won't be enough food to have any spare to donate to them.
It would have one good consequence. It would end the supermarkets' stupid quality policy which sees millions of tonnes of perfectly good veg ploughed back in because it is "the wrong shape" or "the wrong size"! Farmers might actually get a price for their stock which reflects the cost of growing it as well. Bring it on!!!
The NHS would collapse without significant immigration. We do not train nearly enough UK national s for it, and many of the best leave for far better money overseas. Immigrants are mostly working age and have far less impact in health services than UK nationals. Large families are mostly a first generation effect. Impact on housing is significant, but the horribly corrupt planning system and house building industry are bigger ones. House prices are so high because of financial policy maximising profit from supply shortage. People outbid each other by going as deep into debt as the system will allow. That is very, very deeply these days.
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I agree that the NHS would have collapsed without immigration but it shouldn't collapse in the future if immigration is stopped. It will only collapse if we lose those who are working in it at the moment and that is happening not because of Brexit as some are saying but because health workers aren't being paid enough. And no, we don't train enough people for anything as British employers find it cheaper to recruit ready trained workers from abroad.
Housing is a problem because housing policy is in the hands of the Prostitute State and lobbyists from the housing industry stop the government from investing in social housing which would being down or at least stop the increasing cost of housing and rentals.
Housing is also expensive because the government allow houses to the marketed abroad, as "investments" to foreign buyers, which houses are then left unoccupied.
Large families might only be a first generation effect but we still have a nation which is now a third immigrant and rising rapidly in order to fuel unsustainable economic growth. 330,000 new migrants a year net requires the building of over five complete new towns the size of Newbury every year or five the size of Cambridge every two years. That includes all the infrastructure, shops offices, factories and health facilities necessary for a town that size. Is that a good investment of CO2? I don't think so.