Mista, he won't be able to say what advantages Brexit will secure for the UK. I've not met a Brexiteer who could and I've met ones far more intelligent than TTR!
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At best its anecdotes? Mm your a fine one to talk, because most of your posts relate to a very narrow perspective and ignore the wider reality! But I do understand that its either beyond a lot peoples ability to do that or perhaps they are just too lazy to consider complicated issues?
Of course if you have the capacity there is plenty of information out there which actually shows the real situation and it can be verified by a little judicious investigation. I'd say my contacts and experience are a wee bit wider than yours , yet even so I don't rely upon just them, which was why I included the public quote of Rees-Mogg, about the decade of economic stagnation following Brexit!
Hey Ho! I'm really not bothered if you take any notice or not of what I post, if your happy in your little bubble why should I give a ****?
Here are the key stats as at Jan 2020
Total Jobs Lost: 436,296
Total Annual Wages Lost*: £12,511,660,392
Reduction in Annual Income Tax & National Insurance Receipts**: £3,747,289,625.52
Job Losses By Region
Scotland: 30,223
Midlands: 26,318
North East: 22,324
London: 22,245
Wales 14,265
South West: 13,959
North West: 9,144
South East: 5,095
East of England: 5,027
Northern Ireland: 2,555
Gibraltar: 1,000
Southern England: 870
No specific region: 283,729
10 Worst Hit Cities & Towns
Glasgow: 24,612
London: 22,245
Wylfa Newydd: 9,350
S****horpe: 6077
Swindon: 4,951
Manchester: 4,912
Yorkshire: 4,362
Bridgend: 4,010
Derby: 4,000
Hull: 3287
All pre Covid-19 at that stage.
My personal experience? I've been involved in 19 different companies across the financial, insurance, distribution, aerospace and technology sectors who have moved all or part of their operations to an EU country.
I'd estimate the number of actual jobs relocated as around 5,000, add on loss of tax revenue, loss of expenditure by those employees and that impacts on a wider range of people as well as the country. Plus those jobs won't be available or being created in the UK by those companies in the future.
Now my experience is one person and theres a hell of a lot more than that happening.
On top of that we have Covid-19 which will exacerbate the situation and on the one hand will muddy the waters and provide a convenient scapegoat for the Brexiteers when the final results are known.
AS for there being winners and losers, yeah I love people being so sanguine about that when they aren't personally affected!
Interesting - and these figures solely relate to job losses due to Brexit, ot just job losses in an undefined period, including perhaps the impact of technology etc?
5000 due to relocation may be reasonable as insurance and financial services deal with passporting issues, but my experience points to that simply creating jobs in eu countries, not switching jobs from uk: but I wouldn't argue with the 5k too much. Unless you are one of those 5k, it's only a scratch on a 35m (??) workforce.
It's clear why Scotland wanted to stay in!
I do love how no one covers the jobs that have been lost out of this country, BECAUSE we were in the EU.
The red tape and closed markets, were huge in decimating the steel/aluminium industries. They also prevented the government from stepping in to save them, as EU rules don't want that.
The EU in its wisdom of expansion, of lesser developed countries, has been wonderful for us with it's cheap labour.
It has often provided subsidised loans and grants to businesses to set up elsewhere in the EU. The UK has seen a spate of factory closures balanced by new and expanded facilities in poorer EU countries. The UK lost van production to Turkey, car capacity to Slovakia, chocolate to Poland, domestic appliances to the Netherlands and the Czech Republic and metal containers to Poland amongst others in recent years. In various cases there was an EU grant or loan involved in the new capacity.
Of course that cheap labour has travelled this way as well and assisted in driving down wages for us lesser mortals.
Ironically fuelling the rich get richer and poor get poorer, not to mention the black labour market.
But I'm not worthy of an opinion in the 52% club.
No you shouldn't, and I probably spend a lot of time mooching round in a bubble a lot like yours, reasonably impervious to, or even benefiting from, the impact of Brexit and even Covid (providing I don't catch it). But I'm lucky (in a way) to spend time in a number of other bubbles, the ones which foretold that Brexit would happen and Trump would happen, and any anecdotes I give tend to be direct experiences outside my bubble. I think they are enlightening, maybe others do, you obviously don't.
Your opinion is worthless because its not based on facts or anything but blind prejudice.
I can't be arsed to refute everything you say life is too short, but most on here are bright enough to know most of what you post is utter *******s, and you've been called out many times.
I'd just question how the EU was responsible for outsourcing production to China, Singapore, Taiwan, Bangledesh, Turkey etc. etc. which firms have been doing for eons!
On wages :
The Independent Migration Advisory Committee found there was some evidence that immigration depressed the wages of lower-skilled workers while inflating those of higher-skilled workers, but added that the impact was generally small.
When it talks about a small impact, it looked at the period from 1993 to 2017, over which time average earnings for the lowest-paid rose by 55%. Using economic modelling, they estimated that - if there hadn't been European migration into the UK - that rise would have been around 5% higher.
It added that more research was needed to find out if there had been any impact on self-employed workers.
The MAC concluded that other factors had a greater impact on wages, with all workers having done badly since the financial crisis. Real wages are still struggling to rise above where they were in 2008, but lower-skilled workers have done marginally better due to the minimum wage rising faster than average earnings.