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....
Fred1new
- 19 Apr 2016 12:59
- 908 of 12628
Cynic,
"an opinionated pain"
Your description of yourself suggests you have some insight into yourself.
You remind of a miniature Peekapoo which I saw the other day, looking up his own ---- and looking for admiration from others around it.
-=-==-=-=
PS.
Some members of the present neo-con party can't even speak to one another.
Splitting more and more and more interested in self-advancement that the country.
Stan
- 19 Apr 2016 13:23
- 909 of 12628
The question remains unanswered after many attempts of giving you outers the chance to give an explanation.. I wonder why.
Once again:
"Can some of you outers answer this, If we want to sell into the EU from outside how do we not abide by their free movement of Labour rules?"
grannyboy
- 19 Apr 2016 13:25
- 910 of 12628
stan i've replied to your empty screamings of 'will someone
answer the question that if we want to sell into the EU, we'l
have to except free movement of labour'
I've answered that already but its abvious you only read and
take in what you want..
But i'l say again......
Turkey sells into the EU, they DON'T have free movement of
labour, although they would like to because it would be in their
favour, being a low income country, so does the Ukraine and several others...
Haystack
- 19 Apr 2016 13:28
- 911 of 12628
It is only European countries that abide with the free movement criteria for trade. The US doesn't, Canada doesn't, China doesn't, Russia doesn't, Japan doesn't, Australia doesn't, Israel doesn't and not do the rest of the world. They all trade with the EU.
MaxK
- 19 Apr 2016 13:55
- 912 of 12628
Stan must have you all filtered, he still doesent get this non free movement business.
Haystack
- 19 Apr 2016 14:12
- 913 of 12628
That does not imply free trade. None of them have free trade. They either have individual agreements or operate under WTO rules. In all cases it implies tariffs. Some are low and some high. It varies by product as well. In cases where the EU wants to protect a particular product or commodity the tariffs are high or have an upper limit on volume.
will10
- 19 Apr 2016 14:22
- 914 of 12628
Grannyboy
Kettle/pot re Stan questions
There is a reason Turkey has a special arrangement. It will not apply to UK if we leave.
We've been over this. The UK outside EU is not the same as Turkey.
Go Goggle Turkey/EU trade. Don't repeat the same thing over and over.
Haystack
Yes US, China etc does have limit eu access. In US case we buy their planes they buy ours. No free movement to USA required simply because we get to sell them Airbuses.
Limited access also for China. Canada as you know has a negotiated trade deal. No free movement to Canada required because EU gets to sell into Canada some items in return for allowing them to sell us a limited range of items.
But if we want to operate inside the EU single market with blanket access we have to follow their rules.
There are 3 proposals put up by Outers for us to trade into the EU
a Norway model
b Canada
c WTO
all have to be negotiated and have costs.
Do you know of any other?
The reason we are in a single market is because we abide by the single market rules that includes free movement.
Unlike the UK. None of the countries you mention have 40% of their sales into the EU.
No doubt we can negotiate sales to the EU but how? if not a, b, c above.
The leavers have not been able to say how we will sell as much as we do into Europe after we leave.
Outside countries can sell products into EU that the EU does not have but which it needs. Outside countries do not freely sell into EU, products that the EU has readily available or made by EU members. EU protects it's market big time.
Just ask EU workers/politicians if they will allow UK free access for UK products.
EU takes iphones from US because EU can't make them. No free movement of labour into US required by EU. The UK will not get that deal unless it is for some item EU can't get elsewhere..
You leavers will have to come up with how you expect us to trade with the EU in the volume we currently do. We need the EU more than they need us.
And before you bang on again about Germany will still want to sell us cars and France sell us wine ..of course they will and we will take it all because we want it. They only want our stuff if we stay in or via a,b,or c above. Maybe we can negotiate a deal without free movement but I doubt it.
If we say " we will not take your Airbus planes because you will not take our Hondas" We lose simply because we buy more from them than they do from us. As soon as we put on tariffs they put on theirs.
The country that sells the least is always the loser in tariff wars
will10
- 19 Apr 2016 14:24
- 915 of 12628
Hays
Sorry, cross post. You said it better than I
iturama
- 19 Apr 2016 14:31
- 916 of 12628
The fact is that new trade agreements have to be agreed within two years once Article 50 has been invoked. It would make good sense to only invoke Article 50 once a new Tory leadership was in place and a comprehensive exit strategy formed with agreement of a new Brexit cabinet. Show the door to those with no commitment to the strategy.
The trade agreements could be on the basis of free movement but, given the immigration pressure, are much more likely to be on a work permit basis, with the right to indefinite stay for those already living and working in the UK. That would be reciprocal to those living and working in the EU. My opinion for what it is worth.
iturama
- 19 Apr 2016 15:04
- 917 of 12628
And please don't compare the UK to Norway. It is the 5th largest economy in the world and despite the cuts, the strongest military in the EU.
Herr Juncker in comparison has managed to get sacked from tiny Luxembourg. The UK is big enough to work out its own model. And the bureaucrats in the EU know that. You can expect a lot of puffed out chests and gestulations but thats what they do. They can safely be ignored as irrelevant. As usual only Germany, with France sloping behind, will be relevant to the discussion.
cynic
- 19 Apr 2016 15:23
- 918 of 12628
i certainly can't prove it, but both france and germany (in particular) would be very worried indeed if uk looked likely to vote "out", though they will blather they really don't care and that it will be uk's loss
their fear will not be so much uk's exit, as the impetus it will give to the rising clamour of other disaffected people in other member states, and the extra instability that will breed
jimmy b
- 19 Apr 2016 15:36
- 919 of 12628
grannyboy
- 19 Apr 2016 15:38
- 920 of 12628
Duplicate post..
jimmy b
- 19 Apr 2016 15:40
- 921 of 12628
grannyboy
- 19 Apr 2016 15:42
- 922 of 12628
will10 so Turkey has a special arrangement..Now what
would this special arrangement be, and which makes it
more important then the UK in YOUR opinion??? .
As already stated by others and myself, the UK is the 5th
largest economy in the world, what gives you the foresight
to state that Turkey could and should have preferential
treatment over the UK
What do you mean by the UK is different to Turkey
outside the EU..Obviously in a detrimental way in your
opinion, and that they wouldn't be able to negotiate an
advantageous trade agreement..Maybe not with Cameron
doing the negotiating, but get someone who has this country
at heart then we certainly can.......
jimmy b
- 19 Apr 2016 15:44
- 923 of 12628
cynic
- 19 Apr 2016 15:46
- 924 of 12628
jimmy (919) - that's an interesting article though it leaves me puzzled
if the dutch public can force a referendum vote on a brussels stitch-up by getting together a petition of only 300k, why can't other eu member states?
jimmy b
- 19 Apr 2016 15:48
- 925 of 12628
Don't know cynic but i can feel a force gathering in Europe of the major countries .
Sweden as i posted earlier today want a vote and a poll says 59% would vote out
cynic
- 19 Apr 2016 15:49
- 926 of 12628
you mean my post 918 may not be quite so nutty after all?
MaxK
- 19 Apr 2016 15:50
- 927 of 12628
Remainers dare not be honest about the EU – so they peddle images of apocalypse
By
Tom Harris
19 April 2016 • 12:57pm
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2016/04/19/remainers-dare-not-be-honest-about-the-eu--so-they-peddle-images/