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Referendum : to be in Europe or not to be ?, that is the question ! (REF)     

required field - 03 Feb 2016 10:00

Thought I'd start a new thread as this is going to be a major talking point this year...have not made up my mind yet...(unlike bucksfizz)....but thinking of voting for an exit as Europe is not doing Britain any good at all it seems....

Martini - 21 Jul 2017 18:11 - 7178 of 12628

Hilary

I believe the direction of travel is for more centralisation of monetary policy,we only avoided the Euro by the skin of our teeth. Thank you Gordon Brown for that.

All the other stuff we could have done on our own. did we need the EU to clean up our beaches and label food for us? And as for, breathe clean air, have you been in a UK large city recently?

I am happy to pay more for phone charges or air fares if sovereignty is back with us. That could be easily covered if we did not have things like the restrictive practises of the common agricultural policy hiking up food prices.

No I wish them well on their path to The Unites States of Europe but Europe is not like America and even they struggle at times to unite the Nation and make America Great again ( Where have I heard that phrase recently?)


M

hilary - 21 Jul 2017 18:27 - 7179 of 12628

I think you're probably right in terms of greater monetary policy centralisation within the EU, Martini, and I don't think it can ever work all the time you've got a two-speed economy with an industrialised north and a lazy south. The habits and lifestyles of Club Med have been founded over generations, and they're not about to change anytime soon. However, the UK are outside of all that, so I'm not entirely sure how it affects your Brexit choice.

And the stuff the UK could've done alone? Well they haven't.

Taking clean air as an example, it was only February this year that the European Commission were threatening to fine the UK for failing to meet pollution targets. After the initial 'How very dare they?' harumph, isn't improving the life quality and expectancy of its electorate actually something that all governments should be doing as a matter of course, regardless of political persuasion? And in answer to your question as to whether I've been to a large UK city recently, I was last in London for a couple of weeks in January. Gotta say, it wasn't too pleasant and I'm not exactly rushing to go back.

Off to sniff some pine trees. :o)

Claret Dragon - 21 Jul 2017 19:41 - 7180 of 12628

EU is a fricking disaster unless your German. One currency suits them down to the ground. 1 euro the equivalent as a one from Greece!!!!. Those old enough to remember Drachma, Lira, et al know dam well that every independent central bank printed it for fun to stay competitive. Long before QE became the only way forward. Now we have a human land fill site, to keep up demand with no productivity to support it flooding in from all over Africa and Middle East.





hilary - 21 Jul 2017 20:31 - 7181 of 12628

Hmmm. An interesting and intelligent observation.

You understand the currency markets and economic subtleties like GDP?

Claret Dragon - 21 Jul 2017 20:56 - 7182 of 12628

Yep

Sure do

MaxK - 21 Jul 2017 20:58 - 7183 of 12628

Lets assume we are clueless hilly, and give us a rundown in laymans language.

ExecLine - 21 Jul 2017 21:22 - 7184 of 12628

And talking of 'fresh air'....

Thank you so very much, Hilary, for asking a few questions and bringing a bit of it to this thread. :-)

It's been very nice talking with you and also reading everyone's various answers and comments.

Dil - 22 Jul 2017 10:25 - 7185 of 12628

Exec re Polish , I totally agree.

Got 3 Polish guys living near me all in their early/mid twenties who are three of the hardest workers I've ever met and put some of the lazy locals to shame. One once told me after hearing someone moaning about the state of this country on TV that if they didn't like it they should bugger off to Poland for a year and then they might appreciate what they have here.

ExecLine - 22 Jul 2017 11:41 - 7186 of 12628

British holidaymakers heading to Europe for this weekend’s big getaway are being offered what may be the worst ever foreign exchange rates at British airports – in one case, just 88 euro cents for every pound they hand over.

The 88 euro cents offered at Cardiff airport followed a difficult week for the pound on the foreign exchange markets, where sterling fell to its lowest level for eight months to €1.11.

Travellers flying out of Gatwick, Luton and Birmingham on Friday were all being offered less than a euro for each pound, unless they had pre-booked their currency.

hilary - 22 Jul 2017 13:47 - 7187 of 12628

Wonder how many of those taking 88 cents were leave voters? Sterling would be up over 1 € 50 if they'd voted to remain.

But hey, if they take 88 cents on offer they're idiots. The should get a Revolut card instead.

ExecLine - 22 Jul 2017 14:33 - 7188 of 12628

Thanks for that, Hils. I'd never heard of it. I think I'll tool myself up with one.

This is what they have to say about the Revolut card on MSE:

The prepaid Mastercard from Revolut works using its app and gives perfect interbank rates (the rates banks give each other – far better than bureaux de change) for most currencies, including euros and dollars. The only exceptions are Thai baht, Russian roubles and Ukrainian hryvnia – here Revolut will give you the best rate it can find at the time, so check rates in the app.

There are no spending fees but, unlike the Monzo card, free ATM withdrawals are limited to £200 per calendar month – a 2% fee applies above this. Revolut also charges for delivery – £5 for standard delivery and £12 for express delivery.

Need-to-knows
You need a smartphone to use it as it's managed via an app, meaning you can load, exchange and withdraw funds with the touch of a few buttons. Once you've loaded cash, you can spend anywhere in the world where Mastercard's accepted.

You can hold 16 currencies including pounds, euros and dollars on the card, and exchange between them instantly. So, if you have cash left over after your holiday, just swap it back to pounds, and use the card here in the UK.

You can spend in more than 120 currencies (not just euros, dollars or pounds). When you spend, the card automatically exchanges from your balances at the interbank rate for that currency, except Thai baht, Russian roubles and Ukrainian Hryvnia where you get the best rate that Revolut can find, though it may not be the interbank.

Revolut applies a small mark up on its rates at weekends, when the markets are closed. It takes the interbank rate at midnight on Friday and adds between 0.5% and 1.5% depending on the currency until 11.59pm on Sunday.

You need to request the card in the app once you've signed up – it won't arrive automatically.

To be safe, only load cash on the cards if you'll use them soon.

The card takes up to nine working days to arrive.

Revolut's card provider Wirecard Card Solutions is regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority, meaning money you deposit is ring-fenced (in a Barclays account), so in the event there are problems with Revolut, the money's safe.

Application fee: None, but standard delivery is £5, express is £12
Monthly fee: None
Exchange rate: Perfect interbank rates except for Thai baht, Russian roubles and Ukrainian Hryvnia (see above)
ATM withdrawal fee: None up to £200 or equivalent per calendar month, 2% after that
Loadable currencies: euros, US dollars, pounds, Australian dollar, Danish krone, Romanian leu, Swedish krona, Hong Kong dollar, Israeli new sheqel, Norwegian krone, New Zealand dollar, Singapore dollar, Turkish lira and South African rand. | Spendable currencies: Euros, dollars & 118 others
Top up: Free via bank transfer or UK debit card
Replacement charge: £6
Fee for spending in different currency (eg, in dollars on a card loaded with euros): N/A (all exchanges are done at the interbank rate)
Any freebies? None

Claret Dragon - 22 Jul 2017 14:42 - 7189 of 12628

Once a year Holiday makers to Benidorm do get ripped if they fail to plan. In my experience the only folks getting currency at Airports are those with a business account with the company they work for.

1 to 1 with Euro cant come quick enough on a selfish note.

hilary - 22 Jul 2017 15:13 - 7190 of 12628

Doc,

They're very good, you do it all through your iPhone!

However, be aware that they won't work in every pay at the pump service station, and there's the odd autoroute toll booth where they won't work either. The merchant needs an internet connection for the authorisation, and some places don't have.

The other good thing about them is that you can either upload funds and convert the money to the local currency when you feel the rate is good, and then spend in the pre-converted local currency, or you can leave your deposit in your native currency, in which case only the amount you actually spend will get converted at spot at the point of sale. If the rate's a bit iffy, it's often better to do that.

Oh, and finally, if you're buying something from a multi-national company, it's worth checking their prices in different currencies, as you can often get a better price paying with your Revolut card in a different currency. For instance, Ryanair flights are often cheaper if you buy them in euros than in sterling. Ditto, the ferry companies and Eurotunnel.

ExecLine - 22 Jul 2017 15:18 - 7191 of 12628

Thanks for that extra stuff, Hils. Much appreciated. :-)

MaxK - 22 Jul 2017 15:30 - 7192 of 12628

Martini - 22 Jul 2017 15:35 - 7193 of 12628

I use Caxton for the same purpose. Which if either is better I have no idea.

Still got a holiday worth of Euro spending on it from March this year.

Fred1new - 22 Jul 2017 17:35 - 7194 of 12628

Hilary,

Welcome back.

I notice your "french" hasn't improved, but the content of your posts are very sensible and applicable to current EU economic "chaos".

I was told about 55 years ago that "they knew that I had it in me" (God knows what!).

Mind haven't a bad run since then.

The same applies to you.

Hope the knee has settled down.
-=-=-=-

Fred1new - 23 Jul 2017 08:07 - 7195 of 12628

Summer reading for the Brexiters.


iturama - 23 Jul 2017 16:06 - 7196 of 12628

Jeremy Corbyn has admitted he was "unaware" of the size of the student loans debt when he said he would "deal with it" during the general election campaign. Apparently a pledge is not a promise. Definition of pledge in this context "a solemn promise or agreement to do or refrain from doing something". Maybe it was the refrain bit he really meant.
So we have a leader of the Labour party whose word is not worth the paper it is written on and was clearly intent on bribing "students" - read the young that can't find a proper job. A shadow home secretary that can't count and has clear mental problems. A shadow education secretary that left school as a pregnant teenager with no qualifications. A shadow chancellor that was too dumb even for Red Ken at the GLC. Very promising government in waiting. Who wants to write a book on them for reading on the beach?



MaxK - 25 Jul 2017 19:59 - 7197 of 12628

Eat your heart out Fred :-)


Boost for Britain as BMW picks Oxford over Germany and Netherlands to build new electric Mini





BMW's Mini E electric car will be built in the UK Credit: EPA



By Alan Tovey, Industry Editor
25 July 2017 • 2:52pm




Britain’s car making industry has received a major vote of confidence after BMW announced it will build an all-electric version of the Mini in the UK.

The German car giant said the full-electric Mini E will roll off the production lines at its Oxford plant - which is the historic home of the iconic car - from 2019.

There had been speculation that the work could go to BMW’s factory in the Netherlands which currently produces a smaller amount of the fleet or even an entirely new plant in Germany.

However the news guarantees the future of the 4,500 staff at plant, who currently build the bulk of the 360,000 Minis built each year.



Full story here: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2017/07/25/boost-britain-bmw-picks-oxford-germany-netherlands-build-new/
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