Brexit benefits - l...
 

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Brexit benefits - lets start a list

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Anyway, let's not get the thread closed due to derailment..

Brexit benefits so far are

1. Pending

2. (see 1.)

Anyone... anyone?


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 1:46 am
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Schadenfreude as all the racist pensioners with homes in Spain have discovered all too late that “send them back where they came from” also applies to them.

@cougar my old man was Spanish resident, UK born and worked in the UK and paid UK tax all his life until retirement at about 55 years old...denied a vote as he was not tax resident in the UK at the time, although we are a british family for as long back as I can track, welsh/celtic to be precise.

He told me for years to get out of the UK after he emmigrated, and I was always like yeh yeh, someday..but now that 'some day' has been denied to me due to brexit, unless I can russle up half a million euros to pay for a 'golden visa'. Unlikely.

How can removing peoples rights by a bunch of insular racists (to freedom of movement for example) be fair or democratic?

Although supprisingly, I do meet what I would call a british football hooligan in spain on occasion still saying that brexit is brilliant, but thankfully not where I am, it's more a benidrom/alicante ex-pat attitude, which is basivally like blackpol but with better weather.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 2:35 am
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And cleaner beaches.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 2:55 am
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As a UK national living in EU.

I can buy 4 bottles of spirits in duty free.

Haven't been done for speeding through cameras

Most of the businesses I work with now have an office in Europe so I can deal in euros and not worry about exchange rates.

Nothing else jumps out.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 3:36 am
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I love the 'duty free' airport scam. It's brilliant.

Yes you're not paying tax on it, but, plot twist,  airports ramp up the prices so much that the tax saving is essentially zero in comparison to buying the product at source and pay local tax on it.

See also sunglasses, and perfumes.

For example a 10x50g pack of tobacco is just under €100 currently, from a local tabac. Thats including tax, and cheaper than tax free, even though you've already paid tax on it.

I think 1x30g costs about £20 in the UK currently.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 3:53 am
kelvin reacted
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Anyway, we all love a good moan.

let’s not get the thread closed due to derailment..

Brexit benefits so far are...

...

?


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 3:59 am
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let’s not get the thread closed due to derailment..

Brexit benefits so far are…

If it wasn't getting derailed there would be no posts and it would die anyway.

Reason: there are no benefits (unless you're a multi millionaire Tory donor then there has been one or two. But for us? Nope.).


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 4:56 am
Del and kelvin reacted
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Biggest benefit for me is my Pro-Brexit family have gone very very quiet.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 5:54 am
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Anyway, we all love a good moan.

let’s not get the thread closed due to derailment..

Brexit benefits so far are…

I did mention it a while back but the tampon tax removal was a definite Brexit benefit.
(At the time)

Other than this I’m unaware of any tangible benefit unless you were called Boris, Liz or Rishi as this gave you your dream job.

What are we seven years in…….


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 6:52 am
 MSP
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There could have been potential brexit benefits, personally I dislike the EU rules about putting public investment out to private tender, allowing corporations to make huge profits from delivering poor services and poor wages. These rules benefit the asset class and not the employed class. I don't see how the future energy and transport needs can be met while dealing with climate change without a proper public ownership model.

However that was never the brexit that was on offer, in fact the brexit on offer was the very opposite of the required solutions. And even if that was the brexit that was offered, it would have still taken a narrow path to success over many parliamentary terms involving different leaders and political parties, so the probability of success would still have been extremely low.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 7:11 am
dissonance, verses, kelvin and 1 people reacted
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Pretty much what I was thinking @MSP

You could certainly aspire to a Brexit that offered real world benefits, but those benefits were never on offer, and had virtually no chance of ever being on offer.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 7:19 am
ctk reacted
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Even with a 'lexit' we would still have had the trade disadvantages, wouldn't we? Maybe a soft lexit could have been an overall positive? Of course it was never on the cards as you say.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 7:29 am
kelvin reacted
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You could certainly aspire to a Brexit that offered real world benefits, but those benefits were never on offer, and had virtually no chance of ever being on offer.

Let's go back and remember who was promoting Brexit...

All folk have done is let themselves me shafted for the promise of a few crumbs from the cookie jar so rather than any benefits, which we've now pretty much established haven't occurred, at least for Joe Public, how about naming ANYTHING meaningful that is actually as good as it was in the UK early 2016?


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 7:41 am
kelvin reacted
 ctk
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1. In Wales the CAP will be replaced with something better. Hopefully in England too.
2. Kidney cider
3. Schadenfreude


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 7:54 am
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 In Wales the CAP will be replaced with something better. Hopefully in England too.

So is it currently worse than 2016, or just the same?

Also, define "better" - include all 'stakeholders' too, as usually for everyone that gets a 'benefit' someone else will see a 'loss'.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 8:00 am
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Brexit benefits – lets start a list

1. Endless STW debates on the subject
2. See #1


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 8:03 am
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In Wales the CAP will be replaced with something better.

I like the idea of agricultural policy being devolved, because agriculture in the nations is clearly pretty different. Mind you it's also pretty different across England too.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 8:05 am
kelvin reacted
 ctk
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So is it currently worse than 2016, or just the same?

Its better already.

Also, define “better” – include all ‘stakeholders’ too, as usually for everyone that gets a ‘benefit’ someone else will see a ‘loss’.

Better for everyone on balance, not massively skewed in favour of rich landowners like the CAP.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 8:10 am
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So I started this yesterday morning and now there are 7 p[ages of comment. I have only skim read them but the benefits appear to be:

1) Everyone* is better off
2) It is possible to have regional variations in farming subsidies**
3) ?

So, I make that 1 benefit for less than 1% of the country and 1 benefit that we had already. Did I miss any?

*as long as you only include the very rich in your definition of everyone.
** It was before but now UK politicians are more vocal about it as it lands with them rather than the MEPs who know one really knew anyway


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 8:19 am
kelvin reacted
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WRT the tampon tax....

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2023/aug/16/tampon-tax-retailers-vat-period-products-customers

And if anyone can tell me what the Welsh CAP replacement will be then I am all ears. I work in the industry, I have had some input in the planning of the new scheme, have spent years working in agri-environmental scheme development at an EU level, am in a group of farmers running a charity (to deliver tree planting opportunities to other farmers) who have the ear of the farming unions and the Welsh Assembly, and NONE of us have a clue what the new CAP replacement will look like when it is finally introduced at the start of next year. It doesn't exactly make long term business planning very easy.

On a different note. We have some friends of Mrs WF over from Germany who arrived yesterday. They said that had expected to find a country on its arse from what the media had been reporting back home but were pleasantly surprised by the state of the place. Couldn't get over how clean and punctual the trains were n(they are travelling by public transport!) 🙂


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 8:26 am
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Greed is good.
I blame Thatcher's government cider


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 8:30 am
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Better for everyone on balance, not massively skewed in favour of rich landowners like the CAP.

"But critics warned that big arable farmers were still likely to reap the biggest rewards under the new plans, with meagre pickings for small farmers and those in difficult environments, such as upland and moorland regions."

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/jan/26/details-long-awaited-farming-subsidies-overhaul-england-revealed

Seems to be saying otherwise...


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 8:37 am
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Past schemes were simple in that a farmer didn't need do a lot to claim them. So years ago if you kept x number of sheep, you got x £ amount of payment, Then it was x £ per hectare. Obviously this favoured the bigger farmers in absolute terms but was no barrier to anyone claiming. The new schemes will be very prescriptive and complex and, whilst undoubtedly able to deliver more targeted environmental goals, unless you have a free unit of labour, like a dedicated farm secretary or land agent on the books of the farm you probably won't be claiming anything. This will intimately mean ONLY the larger industrial farms or landowners like the National Trust or RSPB will end up receiving any public money.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 8:50 am
kelvin and Caher reacted
 mrmo
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There could have been potential brexit benefits, personally I dislike the EU rules about putting public investment out to private tender, allowing corporations to make huge profits from delivering poor services and poor wages. These rules benefit the asset class and not the employed class. I don’t see how the future energy and transport needs can be met while dealing with climate change without a proper public ownership model.

Remember who it was it campaigned for much of this, oh yes the UK drove many of these EU schemes. Now without the restraining tendencies of some other countries don't expect things to get better.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 9:00 am
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WRT the tampon tax…

Yep, its a similar thing with the magical trade deals, the benefits don't have to be passed on.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 9:04 am
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In my local all the tradesfolk are fully pro-Brexit as the lower priced and hard working competition have largely left. As a result getting an electrician or plumber or builder is a lot harder and far more expensive than 5 years ago.

So yes, there is a Brexit benefit. A group of workers have put their rates up and have full order books.

See also pub chefs/cooks. Here in Surrey most pubs are crying out for chefs. They are out there but now landlords are saying they want 'too much money'.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 9:10 am
 ctk
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@welshfarmer I have been visiting an organic farm in the Vale with my school and the farmers were happy that a) subsidies were going direct to the farmer and b) they were being encouraged to do sustainable, environmentally friendly farming.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 9:18 am
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Anyone know how equivalent threads are going on more pro-Brexity forums like Pistonheads? I don't enjoy going on there as it's full of smug, selfish, self entitled ****holes and it just winds me up but I'm sure there's some crossover in membership with those that can tolerate it.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 9:38 am
 dazh
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Give me something tangible, anything, I don’t care how small it is, give me something.

It's not fair mum, we had brexit and I didn't get my sweeties. Grow up man!

Brexit is/was a political and economic transfer of power at a macro-economic level. The real impact of that will only become apparent over decades, not a couple of years. We don't really know what the real outcomes will be until we start exercising that power at a macro scale and that hasn't even started yet. The time to judge brexit will be after one or two terms of a different govt. If after that they have failed to take advantage of their ability to set policy independent of Europe then that will be the point we can label it a failure, but until then we simply don't know.

TBH as far as I'm concerned if the tories are booted out of power and remain in opposition for the next decade as a result of their incompetence and arrogance then brexit has already done it's job. Finishing off the tories as a party of govt is a bigger prize than anything EU membership could offer.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 9:44 am
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Finishing off the tories as a party of govt is a bigger prize than anything EU membership could offer.

Agree with a tinge of be careful what you wish for (i.e. who will replace them, what will they turn into)


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 9:47 am
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We don’t really know what the real outcomes will be

I think we do, in some cases. We know that trade and industry will be negatively impacted. That's why the whole thing was set up in the first place.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 9:48 am
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The new schemes will be very prescriptive and complex and, whilst undoubtedly able to deliver more targeted environmental goals, unless you have a free unit of labour, like a dedicated farm secretary or land agent on the books of the farm you probably won’t be claiming anything.

Maybe an opportunity for an agency?

"Do you farm in Wales? Check to see if you have a claim! No win no fee!"


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 9:50 am
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If after that they have failed to take advantage of their ability to set policy independent of Europe then that will be the point we can label it a failure, but until then we simply don’t know.

We had plenty of ability to set policy independent of europe, repeating brexiteer myths about the EU holding us back doesnt make them true

We also had a great deal of influence to set policy from within the EU (the changes to CAP being a good example)

you keep talking about the sunlit uplands if we just wait a few more decades.......... what policies exactly do you want to see enacted that we couldnt before


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 9:55 am
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tbf even on pistonheads theres not many so vocally defending brexit, seems to be viewed largely as a mistake, theres a few die hards, but just as opinion polls show, the public is slowly realising its failed

https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&f=92&t=1982344&i=120

https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&f=205&t=2018570&d=0#seperator


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 9:59 am
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We don’t really know what the real outcomes will be

In which case it should not have been proposed until the outcomes were costed and known to be beneficial.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 10:11 am
verses reacted
 dazh
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In which case it should not have been proposed until the outcomes were costed and known to be beneficial.

I don't disagree, but we are where we are. Brexit was always a risky shot in the dark forced on us by arrogant and incompetent tory politicians. But shit happens, and now we have to deal with it. Are we going to let the fact we don't like brexit stop us from trying to make it work, or are we just going to wallow in a pit of self pity?


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 10:35 am
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Perhaps the thread title should have read, Brexit benefits for the UK and UK residents?  The few advantages are all for other European countries or people living in them!

I wonder how many people who voted for Brexit understood what the EU actually was?

Apparently on the results day, the most common Google search was “what is the EU!”

If you couldn’t answer the above, you should not be able to proceed to answer the question on whether the UK should leave or remain.

Are there any advantages to Brexit for normal middle of the road, hard working people in the UK?


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 10:36 am
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You’ve probably seen me write this before, but “Brexit isn’t the destination, it’s the vehicle”, and one of the greatest Trojan Horses ever.

It’s enabled the UK to move from its (slim) social democratic destination to one that will make life harder for those either not fortunate to be born into privilege or not able to get themselves into privilege through either intelligence, work, education, luck and/or criminal acts.

It is then maintained by making life even harder for those outside this privilege group, and once you’re in it you’ll do ANYTHING not to drop out. Go live & work in the USA for a while, this is our destination – just don’t be poor (or unlucky)…

This is the key “benefit” from Brexit, but only for a very, very limited number of people.

I suppose the question was reasonably open ended and therefore the detail of specifically who a Brexit benefit applies to to needs to be stated.

Those already with money and privilege, and/or looking to create an unequal environment more like America...

Banks/fund managers, Fossil fuel companies and logistics companies looking to hoover up Utilities and public services and run them "for profit" will all benefit from the coming decade or two of slowly loosened laws and regulations and gradually de-clawed regulators.

There might be a slight slow down while SKS has his stint in No.10, but I'm not sure Labour can (or indeed really want to) halt "the project"...


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 11:03 am
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I'm a lorry driver, so got a big pay rise, as a lot of the eastern European drivers left the UK. Unfortunately, everything costs more because of the increased logistics costs.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 11:50 am
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uselesshippy - how much better off are you now than 7 years ago?

Then:

  • Discount 30% of net due to inflation
  • Look at your payslip to see the impact of income tax, frozen allowances mean that the 40% rate is moving down the income scale
  • Mortgage - same calc, paying more less as a ration of borrowed money

Still better off, oh and add on any costs that previously you never had to pay - on holiday for example, we paid insurance as now not covered in the EU and roaming charges (it all adds up).


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 4:36 pm
 dazh
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Discount 30% of net due to inflation

Inflation caused by the combination of the pandemic squeezing supply chains and the spike in energy prices due to the Ukraine war. Brexit played very little part in the inflation we're experiencing now.

Look at your payslip to see the impact of income tax, frozen allowances mean that the 40% rate is moving down the income scale

UK govt policy to supposedly address the debt accrued during the pandemic. Bollocks all to do with brexit.

Mortgage – same calc, paying more less as a ration of borrowed money

See above on inflation.

Seriously, do better. Not everything we're dealing with today economically is a result of brexit. Not even a medium amount of it in fact.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 4:43 pm
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TBH the ehic/ghic still valid but you’d always want to take travel insurance as it’s usually got the repatriation cover.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 4:45 pm
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Seriously, do better. Not everything we’re dealing with today economically is a result of brexit. Not even a medium amount of it in fact.

TBH Brexit was an enabler for the type of numpties we’ve had running the country for the last 3 PMs and the associated hangers on.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 4:49 pm
felltop, kelvin, funkmasterp and 1 people reacted
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While the tread has highlighted the lack of apparent Brexit benefits for the UK, dazh does make a valid point that you kinda just have to suck it up and get on with it now. Even if there were to be another referendum to rejoin the EU I can’t imagine member states (apart from ROI) rushing to welcome the UK back in given the conduct of UK MEPs prior to leaving and of UK politicians during talks since Brexit. While I don’t take a deep interest in Economics things seem to be going reasonably well for EU states without the UKs involvement.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 6:22 pm
kelvin and funkmasterp reacted
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@intheborders I am better off, because I don't have a mortgage, and I'm nowhere near the top tax bracket. But, the small financial benefits are far outweighed by the masses of negatives.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 6:27 pm
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Inflation caused by the combination of the pandemic squeezing supply chains and the spike in energy prices due to the Ukraine war.

You missed wage inflation due to scarcity of the right labour off your list. All those from Eastern Europe who saw no benefit from being here and went home. Also inflation due to a reluctance to export foodstuffs into UK due to the long waiting time due to red-tape and a lack of staff.

Seriously, do better.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 6:35 pm
felltop, Cougar, kelvin and 1 people reacted
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"Inflation caused by the combination of the pandemic squeezing supply chains and the spike in energy prices due to the Ukraine war. Brexit played very little part in the inflation we’re experiencing now."

This happened to every country in Europe. But we have the worst and most persistent inflation because Brexit has added further costs, due to extra red tape (didn't they say Brexit would reduce red tape?!), extra transport costs (delays at borders), reduced choice (suppliers choosing to sell to other markets instead) and a shortage of the right staff, etc. It's laughable and painful that "project fear" was so right.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 7:03 pm
kelvin reacted
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I tend to avoid this stuff these days, it reminds me of work, when there's an accident or incident, most folk spend effort on finding out who to blame, rather than looking at a solution, Brexit is done now, it was daft, it was self harming, but it's what it is, all we can do as a nation is fix whatever we can to make it better, reality is we (No to Brexit) just didn't respect the right wingers, pensioners and so on when the vote was announced and happened, way too confident and flippant, and it ended the way it did.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 7:12 pm
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What does "get on with it" actually mean though? For me, it means mothballing our small company which was involved in scientific research with various EU colleagues (bringing in about £100k and paying roughly £40k in tax over the past few years, luckily the country is rich enough that there are no consequences to ****ing up businesses). It also means narrowing our horizons regarding possible foreign moves. It's just putting up with a shittier poorer life with narrower horizons. Fortunately I'm rich enough it really doesn't matter, so I can put up with it, but I can't make anything good out of it.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 7:13 pm
 dazh
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You missed wage inflation due to scarcity of the right labour off your list.

I think you're going to struggle to argue to any working person that wage inflation is a bad thing. For many the whole point of brexit was to create the wage inflation which you think is so economically damaging. To them that's a massive benefit. Presumably you're rich enough that you don't need a bit of wage inflation?


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 8:20 pm
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So long as

A) everyone is working who wants to / can do so
B) every employer who needs labour can source staff

I don't believe either of those things to be true.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 8:43 pm
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you kinda just have to suck it up and get on with it now

all we can do as a nation is fix whatever we can to make it better

We're posting here to vent. It's not like there's some other super positive thing we could be doing but aren't because of posting on here.

We're all 'getting on with it' every day because we have no choice.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 9:04 pm
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The only way to make it materially better is to move towards SM/CU membership. I don't pretend this will be quick or easy but everything else is just tinkering around the edges and politicians on both sides continuing with the fantasy that we just need the One True Brexit to make everything ok are a large part of the problem.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 9:16 pm
kelvin reacted
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While the tread has highlighted the lack of apparent Brexit benefits for the UK, dazh does make a valid point that you kinda just have to suck it up and get on with it now.\

Well yes but just whose responsibility is it to mitigate the undoubted issues caused and in the longer term fix those things which have been broken? It certainly isn't mine. Unfortunately those who dropped us into this mess don't seem particularly good at (or even interested in) fixing it.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 9:38 pm
kelvin reacted
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The only way to make it materially better is to move towards SM/CU membership.

Absolutely. (like you I only have a green rosette so have to type likes) And it would be nice if the likes of Starmer were honest enough to admit that and make policy accordingly. I don't see how any of what Starmer proposes:

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2023/05/18/keir-starmer-labour-eu-trade-brexit-election/

can be reconciled with most favoured nation rules without a customs union.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 9:43 pm
 igm
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For many the whole point of brexit was to create the wage inflation which you think is so economically damaging.

Right up until they want their car serviced, or some electrical work doing, or a taxi somewhere - and then they find out other people’s wage inflation hits their pocket directly.
But of course it’s only rich folk that have cars or take taxis or need electricians.
No one is suggesting that certain things in these countries that form the UK didn’t need rebalancing.  The suggestion is that overall Brexit pushes them further out of balance, further away from the desired outcome of millions of voters (on both sides of the vote).


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 9:46 pm
kelvin reacted
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I can’t imagine member states (apart from ROI)

No not really. Ireland is quite happy to have friends like Germany and France.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 9:56 pm
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“I think you’re going to struggle to argue to any working person that wage inflation is a bad thing.”

Wage inflation is no use to anyone if the cost of living is going up faster than your wages. I voted for the tories in what seems like the distant past - they used to seem to be the party that would run the country best economically, thus having the potential to make everyone better off. But the last decade or so they’ve been an economic disaster.

My small business is surviving but we’re making less money that we would have done, and paying far less in VAT because it now gets claimed at the other end for all our EU sales - so our hard work here makes money for EU governments when our government used to get that money! It’s a pretty big chunk of money considering how small this business is. No wonder it feels like the country is bankrupt…


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 10:04 pm
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The only way to make it materially better is to move towards SM/CU membership.

Yeah, that's what the politicians can do. All we can do is continue to discuss it and understand what happened and why. Calmly and respectfully. That's what'll bring people round, and when enough people have been brought round the democratic pressure will start to build.

Yeah, I know the polls, but right now it's still too raw and too fresh.


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 10:45 pm
kelvin reacted
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For many the whole point of brexit was to create the wage inflation which you think is so economically damaging. To them that’s a massive benefit. Presumably you’re rich enough that you don’t need a bit of wage inflation?

when wage inflation is outstripped by actual inflation it makes people poorer...

are people really that economically illiterate?


 
Posted : 16/08/2023 11:13 pm
AndrewL, salad_dodger, piemonster and 1 people reacted
 dazh
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when wage inflation is outstripped by actual inflation it makes people poorer…

Think we might have crossed some sort of weird rubicon where anti-brext people are now repeating the nonsense from Sunak, Hunt and Bailey that the inflation we're suffering from is caused by higher wages. Seriously, is that where this debate is now? This inflation has not been caused by wage growth, but maybe, just maybe (in some sectors) being out the EU has allowed wage growth to catch up to soften the blow. That's not a bad thing, for significant numbers of people it's an enormous relief.


 
Posted : 17/08/2023 1:27 am
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Good luck with getting the inflation down.

Petrol price today at Shell yesterday was 151.16p.

Brexit, lack of workforce (immigrants from EU & the World), wage inflation etc are just some minor factors which are insignificant by comparison to energy cost.

The nail in the coffin will be the "green" policy that all silly govts try to implement and to impose at the wrong time. It is a bit like trying to build a toilet when the poo is already ready to burst out from the back end, and the chances of a soiled trousers is very high now.


 
Posted : 17/08/2023 2:13 am
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Brexit played very little part in the inflation we’re experiencing now.

Without Brexit would Putin have invaded?  And why is UK (core) inflation so much higher than our 'competitors'?

UK govt policy to supposedly address the debt accrued during the pandemic.

Oh, so somehow Covid's £400bn is a problem but not the £1000bn the Tories had already borrowed (2010-2019)?

Not everything we’re dealing with today economically is a result of brexit.

Who said it was?

I voted for the tories in what seems like the distant past – they used to seem to be the party that would run the country best economically, thus having the potential to make everyone better off. But the last decade or so they’ve been an economic disaster.

I guess the 1992 Black Wednesday debacle passed you by, and the following (almost) 5 years of dire economy?


 
Posted : 17/08/2023 8:33 am
kelvin reacted
 ctk
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Without Brexit would Putin have invaded?

Oh come on!


 
Posted : 17/08/2023 8:35 am
 ctk
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I voted for the tories in what seems like the distant past – they used to seem to be the party that would run the country best economically,

You were hoodwinked. The Tories borrow more and pay back less than the Labour Party. Labour should make more of it but they dont.


 
Posted : 17/08/2023 8:37 am
 dazh
Posts: 13182
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Without Brexit would Putin have invaded?

What!!!? Seriously, you're blaming the Ukraine war on brexit?

And why is UK (core) inflation so much higher than our ‘competitors’?

Energy prices mostly, and quite a bit of corporate greed. The UK govt could have stopped inflation in its tracks, but that would have meant govt intervention in the market which they are ideologically opposed to. It's got a lot to do with tory ideology, and not much to do with brexit.

Oh, so somehow Covid’s £400bn is a problem but not the £1000bn the Tories had already borrowed (2010-2019)?

That is why I said 'supposedly'. Irrespective of whether it's necessary (it's not!), the stated policy of the UK govt is to 'reduce the debt' (it's one of Sunak's five key promises), and one of the main ways they're doing that is by raising more tax by freezing thresholds against inflation. It's got nothing to do with brexit.


 
Posted : 17/08/2023 8:52 am
 dazh
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But the last decade or so they’ve been an economic disaster.

The tories have always been an economic disaster. Their economic modus operandi is to take money from working people and give it to the rich asset class. That results in an entirely dysfunctional economy where investment is discouraged and rent-seeking is rampant. As someone who runs a small business you've been voting for the wrong people I'm afraid. At least you now seem to have realised that. 🙂


 
Posted : 17/08/2023 8:58 am
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This inflation has not been caused by wage growth, but maybe, just maybe (in some sectors) being out the EU has allowed wage growth to catch up to soften the blow. That’s not a bad thing, for significant numbers of people it’s an enormous

this does not make sense- real pay has decreased , and as you say labour shortages hace helped raise wages, but that has also slowed the economy, meanwhile the effect of brexit has had a significant impact on inflation  https://www.bbc.com/news/business-65962027.amp

as for Putin, brexit was always going to be a victory for him, You only have to look Russia Today's output during the ref campaign to aee that

https://twitter.com/lunaperla/status/1280174095720689664?t=tVS4zjybtZHFSIrCFpPeOQ&s=19


 
Posted : 17/08/2023 9:23 am
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What!!!? Seriously, you’re blaming the Ukraine war on brexit?

I didn't say that, I said "Without Brexit would Putin have invaded? "

It's a reasonable question, but you seem incapable of understanding it, like many other questions you just blank - IME you're just another believer, and it comes across on many posts.


 
Posted : 17/08/2023 9:30 am
kelvin and salad_dodger reacted
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Getting one of Russia's biggest critics out of the EU was a definite brexit benefit for Putin

TBF when Johnson as home sec went to the EU after the Skripal poisoning the EU gave a stronger response than russia expected

https://twitter.com/EUReuters/status/973643703372976128

similarly Ill bet they were very upset by Johnson's response to the Ukraine invasion considering all the money they'd pumped in to the Tories!

https://twitter.com/MarsPioneer/status/1592969223998955521

 “Without Brexit would Putin have invaded? ”

The more relevant question would be whether Johnson wouldve been so quick to make headlines helping out Ukraine if he hadnt been balls deep in the Patterson/Pincher/ Bodies pile high scandals at the time


 
Posted : 17/08/2023 9:41 am
kelvin reacted
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Just popped back to see if any "benefits" have been added to the growing list........nope. I'll pop in again tomorrow .


 
Posted : 17/08/2023 9:42 am
kelvin reacted
 dazh
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IME you’re just another believer, and it comes across on many posts.

A believer who voted to remain and would vote to rejoin given the chance. 🙄

I just refuse to join in the circle-jerk of self-pity and recrimination. There are far more important things to be worrying about, and this ongoing obsession with a decision made seven years ago is distracting us from tackling those other things.


 
Posted : 17/08/2023 9:55 am
 dazh
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this does not make sense- real pay has decreased , and as you say labour shortages hace helped raise wages, but that has also slowed the economy

For those who have benefited (like our lorry driver who posted earlier), their real pay would have decreased even further. Which number do you think working people care about more, GDP or their monthly pay packet?

And as for inflation, a direct quote from the bbc article you posted.

"But in total, the LSE team reckons the changes could have accounted for over a quarter of the rise in food bills we've seen since the end of 2019. By contrast, the cost savings in new trade deals agreed since then have been minimal.

So while Brexit may not have been the biggest reason for our surging food inflation, the higher costs it added may have played a significant part."

So around 25% of inflation is due to brexit. So 75% - three times more - is due to other sources. That's exactly in line with everything I've said, because I've never pretended brexit has no impact, just that it's not nearly as much as other factors like energy prices and the disruption from the pandemic.

See above about obsessing about the wrong things.


 
Posted : 17/08/2023 10:09 am
 mert
Posts: 3831
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are people really that economically illiterate?

Yes. You can see it in every form of social media and news publications.

It's an utter bin fire. Just like the referendum.


 
Posted : 17/08/2023 10:22 am
kelvin reacted
Posts: 30093
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There are far more important things to be worrying about, and this ongoing obsession with a decision made seven years ago is distracting us from tackling those other things.

This again. Many of us have made changes and shoulder the burden of cost and time lost every week to the "benefits" of Brexit. The little bit of time spent discussing Brexit is sod all compared to the time lost because of it. Put it around the other way... why are you spending so much time contributing to another thread on Brexit yourself?

More importantly... "there are other more important things to deal with than our relationship with the rest of Europe" (which I've always agreed with) does not amount to a "benefit" of Brexit, and nor does it remove the brakes it has put on our country for the foreseeable. It still needs sorting. Brexit isn't "done" and all the hard work is yet to come... expect decades of discussion. I'm sure they'll be some benefits in those discussions at some point (honestly not seen any yet myself, and this thread hasn't helped me yet... some people knowing they can get away with motoring offences abroad and bankers getting paid more aren't positives in my life) but if they ever outweigh the negatives I'll be very surprised.


 
Posted : 17/08/2023 10:39 am
Del reacted
Posts: 18073
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I just refuse to join in the circle-jerk of self-pity and recrimination.

Nice!

Just as you refuse to insulate that energy pit you live in despite some of the highest energy bills on STW. (sticking out tongue smiley here). One of the most negative members on the forum on a host of subjects telling me to be positive in unpleasant terms on the most negative thing Britain has gone through in the last ten years. And unlike many of the issues of previous decades, banking crisis, daft wars, temporary energy price hikes, it'll still be here next year. Oh the joys of STW.

We're still all ears for the future benefits you've promised us but seem incapable of expanding on.


 
Posted : 17/08/2023 11:20 am
 dazh
Posts: 13182
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why are you spending so much time contributing to another thread on Brexit yourself?

Mostly because I'm sitting around waiting for code pipelines and build agents to do their stuff and it's a convenient distraction. 🙂

Just as you refuse to insulate that energy pit you live in despite some of the highest energy bills on STW.

I've already told you I've addressed that problem at significant expense. If you want to send me a load of cash to do more feel free.

telling me to be positive in unpleasant terms on the most negative thing Britain has gone through in the last ten years.

I'm not telling anyone to be positive, I'm telling them to move on and stop obsessing about it.


 
Posted : 17/08/2023 11:22 am
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Stop obsessing about people talking about something you think they shouldn’t be talking about.

Even better, detail some Brexit benefits for us…


 
Posted : 17/08/2023 11:31 am
 dazh
Posts: 13182
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Even better, detail some Brexit benefits for us…

I did up the thread. I'm sure the end of the tories as a party of government is something you can get behind.


 
Posted : 17/08/2023 11:34 am
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They’ll be back. They’re not even gone yet!

The new economic realities for the UK are likely to eat away at all our political parties, not just the Tories.


 
Posted : 17/08/2023 11:41 am
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