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2021-02-26
, 18:16
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Posts: 807 |
Thanked: 1,589 times |
Joined on Aug 2014
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#2
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2021-02-27
, 04:36
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Posts: 106 |
Thanked: 313 times |
Joined on Mar 2019
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#3
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2021-02-27
, 11:42
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Posts: 177 |
Thanked: 427 times |
Joined on Sep 2017
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#4
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2021-02-27
, 21:06
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Posts: 207 |
Thanked: 552 times |
Joined on Jul 2011
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#5
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Didn't we spend years 'negotiating' to ensure free trade was maintained and celebrate finally getting a deal? Politicians
but will have all the fuss of CN22 customs declaration just to send to Europe from UK now
Jolla.com where SFOS X can be purchased
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2021-03-05
, 08:46
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Posts: 6,447 |
Thanked: 20,981 times |
Joined on Sep 2012
@ UK
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#6
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2021-03-07
, 17:51
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Posts: 207 |
Thanked: 552 times |
Joined on Jul 2011
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#7
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Look at it from an individual business' point of view. International trade has challenges. You have to deal with different rules and regulations, custom checks, tariffs and who knows what else.
This is where the idea of a single market comes in. It expands what "within our country" means. It makes it easy to forget that Finland, France, Germany, Slovakia, Romania are different countries. From an individual business' point of view, it makes no difference whether you are buying from or selling to Helsinki, Frankfurt or Milano.
Especially considering that those 450 million cover most of the richer part of the world.
What is worse, the single market made trading so easy that some people, particularly in the country that has been subject to decades of relentless anti-EU propaganda, forgot that it was the single market that made it easy. They take their luck and privilege for granted and are whinging when they foolishly throw it away and suddenly see the consequences. Like, for example, Brexit voting British fishermen.
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2021-03-08
, 10:35
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Posts: 6,447 |
Thanked: 20,981 times |
Joined on Sep 2012
@ UK
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#8
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The EU is a protectionist bloc with a very high tariff barrier at its perimeter (and a tariff schedule that protected German and French industries but weren't well suited to the UK economy), it's hardly a beacon of free trade.
The UK paid an EU membership fee higher than tariffs for the "luck and privilege" of trading without tariffs.
Furthermore import tariffs are money going in to the UK treasury where they are used to pay for the National Health Service, Education, Social Services, ...
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2021-03-08
, 10:58
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Posts: 6,447 |
Thanked: 20,981 times |
Joined on Sep 2012
@ UK
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#9
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2021-03-09
, 14:27
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Posts: 207 |
Thanked: 552 times |
Joined on Jul 2011
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#10
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Oranges are oranges.
Of course the EU is protectionist.
It did not erect any new barriers,
A model so successful it has been replicated many times around the world.
A model the UK had benefited from HUGELY, rising from "the sick man of Europe" to the 5th richest country in the world.
(Note that we have dropped down that rank after the Brexit vote. Depending on what measure you apply, we are now between 7th and 11th.)
Yes, it is money going to the treasury. But where from?
I have tried to explain what a membership of the Single Market means to an individual business such as Jolla and what consequences the choice of a country to leave the Single Market might have.
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availability, sailfish x |
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Anyway, glad I'm a fan of Irish Opera, that makes up somewhat for the inconvenience.