Awwww Bob deleting posts again, bless.
Awwww Bob deleting posts again, bless.
Yeah, give's it the biggun, like he's the all seeing eye, but just as full of pompous bullshit and flowery rhetoric as the gent.
^ The drop in the pound following the referendum has already made imported goods more expensive, so no need for tariff changes to cause a rise, which is reflected in the increase in inflation.
The problem with WTO tariffs vs FTAs is that the WTO tariff rules must apply to all Countries and not just a select few (except for trade with developing countries). That opens the market for all kinds of shite being dumped on the UK.
The main problem though is the UK shopkeeper mentality, which will whack up prices for any excuse and Brexit is going to be number 1 for quite a while. It'll be like 15 Feb 1971 all over again!
how the fuck is that even relevant or an issue ?
do you think England after Brexit will have perfectly audited accounts ???? of course not,
you fookers are so stupid, you jump on any silly tangent to distract the facts that you are going to be fucked over by your incompetent politicians
I know English people like to fuck each other in the ass, and it's a national sport, but here you are really breaking grounds
keep up the good work
I suspect Britain will at least "present" accounts for audit, thereby "proving" DrBoob's point, whatever that was.
But we do agree and I've never said different, that Brit politicians are incompetent. Not as corrupt and ideologically dysfunctional as your lot, but certainly incompetent.
^Have you seen their women!? That explains it all!
anyway, british business organizations are now getting hysterical over Brexit and ask an immediate plan or else all investment to hire more people will stop in the first quarter of 2018, and that is going to be painful
incidentally, MFID II to go live on early 2018 is forcing British banks to hire a lot of Europeans for their expertise because of a worker shortage in England and a lack of skills for implementing that new ESMA signature banking regulation.
That's the whole funny thing, the UK is still implementing complex EU regulations, like MFID II, despite Brexit, and it will be all for nothing, once they leave the EU and they loose their passporting rights, including banking regulations with the US, since ESMA and US regulators have been negotiating for years to make certain regulations compatible for cross-border transactions.
It's a fucking nuclear disaster for UK banks, almost at par with 2008 in my opinion
Thought everyone wanted to hang bankers now they are concerned for them, funny how things change.
some bankers should be hanged, but like everything else, you still need them
am I concerned by them ? not really, plenty of good European banks outside the UK
According to EU's own 'experts' if Brexit cannot be reversed then both parties (Britland and bloc) would be better off if it is delayed a couple of years.
I don't trust them, rather pull the loose tooth than have them play with it.
absolutely, the UK is a liability that we need to remove ASAP from the EU balance sheet
Not read the news today ?Germans demand Brexit is delayed til 2020: Five 'wise men' economists tell Merkel to DELAY
BRUSSELS should delay Brexit talks until after the March 2019 deadline to save Europe’s economy from catastrophe, advisers to Angela Merkel have demanded.
There's no doubt that any failure to reach an agreement pre March 2019 has significant consequences to both the UK and the EU. As part of their planning (because essentially the UK is the only entity that can move unilaterally i.e. without the vote/accord of the EU Parliament), the UK has already built in a 'no deal' scenario (witness their recruitment of substantial numbers of customs/border personnel in recent months).
The grandstanding of the EU has at some stage got to get down to the interests of individual members. Ireland (or Eire if you prefer), is the country that will most be affected by a 'hard' Brexit. What pressure can they bring to bare on the remaining 26 states?
Instead of knee jerk reaction to the EU's Oliver Twist protestations ("Please sir, I want more"), the UK's better taking a more offensive stance, with both the immigration and trade issue. Time the UK got on the front foot methinks.
That's not news, that's the Daily Express and, as always with the Express, what they say is not entirely true. As you're an Express reader I think it's safe to assume that you were too lazy to go check for yourself what it says. This is what it says.
https://www.sachverstaendigenrat-wir...ve_Summary.pdf which is considerably different from what the Express says and the brainless monkeys who make up so much of its readership choose to believe.Given the immense ramifications of the United Kingdom's exit from the EU, the GCEE continues to call for preventingthis scenario. If this is not possible, the objective of the negotiations should be to conclude a follow-up agreement that
minimises the damage for both sides. All four freedoms must be respected in any such agreement, which should not allow for any sort of “cherry picking”. It is,
however, likely that more time will be needed to negotiate this kind of agreement
than the two-year period specified in Article 50 TEU. As a result, the GCEE is in favour of granting a one-time extension of this period.
The Above Post May Contain Strong Language, Flashing Lights, or Violent Scenes.
fuck that extension, let the fookers go and rot on their own
Irrespective of what any Brexit moron says, the fact remains that economically a withdrawal from the EU zone is deleterious to the interests of the UK and shall remain so for the next twenty years.
The currency is to be permanently devalued and shall probably, on a hard brexit, anchor itself at parity with the US dollar but any hope that this debasement will somehow re-energise the long defunct industrial export might of Britain is clearly quite fanciful since in the past year export increases have scarcely materialised but the concomitant Brexit inflation spiral introduced by the Brexit devaluation has dented domestic expenditure - in truth any nominal UK growth in the past year has been precipitated by that domestic spending underpinned by greater personal debt but that has been slowing markedly over the past three months as folk realise they are nearing insolvency.
But the significant factor the Brexit morons continue to overlook is the not inconsiderable trend the world including the EU is now experiencing real growth and demand is rising yet Britain is continuing to fall behind as projections for growth are revised downwards - Brexit has crippled Britain's recovery from the crash and all the gains of "austerity" in 2015 have been thrown away.
The stupidity of the british is really quite spectacular but in terms of government this current regime has surely to be the worst in calibre since Alec Douglas-Home's hapless tenure.
This surely has to be the most entertaining suicide note ever written by a people too fucking stupid to realise just how dumb they are.
There are currently 4 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 4 guests)