Puppycow
Penultimate Amazing
Do the benefits of remaining in the EU outweigh the costs for the UK?
What exactly are the benefits anyway?
What are the costs?
What exactly are the benefits anyway?
What are the costs?
Good question.
According to the treasury, the UK's net contribution to the EU budget in 2011 was £7.4 bn which means that we paid in £7.4bn than we got back out in payments and subsidies.
France rejects EU budget compromiseBritain’s EU rebate – or refund – came under fresh attack from Brussels on Wednesday, raising the stakes for David Cameron ahead of next week’s summit on the bloc’s long-term budget.
France has dismissed a compromise proposal for the EU’s long-term budget as unacceptable, further complicating efforts to win a deal when EU leaders hold a special budget summit next week.
The UK would still have to adhere to EU regualtions, like Norway does currently, to trade with any EU member state, so it would all still be thhere but the UK would have no say at all inhow the regs are formed, jsut like Norway currently does not.
Feuding looks set to bedevil a summit called next week to agree on the European Union’s seven-year budget, with a fresh compromise proposal dismissed by key players just hours after it was put on the table.
On Wednesday, the European Commission pleaded for everyone to “come together in a true European spirit” during the summit. At the same time, it appeared to turn up its nose at a new proposal to knock off extra billions from the 2014-2020 budget– catchily known in Brussels as the Multi-Annual Financial Framework.
. . .
The U.K. has made the most strident demands for a budget freeze and is largely supported by Germany and others, while another large group of countries from Southern and Central Europe is passionately calling for allocations for growth-enhancing projects to be protected.
“The latest numbers being circulated don’t go far enough,” said British Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg during a visit to Paris Wednesday, pointing out that overall the budget would still be rising with inflation – an unacceptable position at a time of budget cuts at home, he argued.
They can't seem to understand that if the UK was out of the EU then the EU countries may not want to deal with us.
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On the other hand, since countries like Spain, Greece, Portugal, Ireland and Italy are suffering so much right now, one could argue that it is time for the countries that are relatively well off to step up and help even more.
We buy more from the EU than we sell to the EU. It is in their interests to come to a deal.
See for example here: http://blogs.ec.europa.eu/ECintheUK/the-uk-and-the-eu-budget-the-facts/Do the benefits of remaining in the EU outweigh the costs for the UK?
What exactly are the benefits anyway?
What are the costs?
Is there any particularly onerous EU regulation that Norway is forced to adhere to? It seems to be like they have the best of all worlds. If they joined they would asked to pay money to the southern countries and the eastern countries.
Scottish Whiskey is allowed to be moved around the EU in wooden barrels because it is the traditional way. No other country's whiskey or spirits is so allowed, it is against Health and Safety legislation. Leaving the EU would destroy the Scottish Whiskey industry.
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Per capita UK's net contribution was € 89 per citizen which is 11th highest among the 11 net contributors.
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Yes. And like I said there's many ways to make these calculations.Is that right?
Includes relevant disclaimer: "However, this calculation can be done in different ways."Here the UK per head is 7th out of all 27 EU members (to get the link click on the tile Net by population)
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/8036097.stm#start
and here overall the UK is the 2nd highest net contributor (to get the link click on the tile Net Contribution)
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/8036097.stm#start
Ill make it extremely simple for you.The Eurosceptics seem to want their cake and eat it. They would like free access to the European markets on favourable terms but they don't want to be bound by the human and employees rights laws. They can't seem to understand that if the UK was out of the EU then the EU countries may not want to deal with us.
Ill make it extremely simple for you.
We'll trade together. You be Britain and I'll be Europe.
Now I'll give you £8 worth of goods today and then you can give me £10 worth of goods tomorrow. We'll repeat this trading of goods ad infinitum...oh hold on I don't want to deal with you any more.
So now you are £2 up and I'm £2 down. Every 2 days. Why would I want to stop trading or dealing with you when I make money by selling you stuff and buying stuff from you?
The idea that Europeans are going to cut all trade off if the UK either leaves the EU altogether or remains in the free-trade area is simplistic naivety at best.
China has no problem trading with the EU. So why does any other country have to be bound by EU employment law in order to trade?
It would seem that you are the one who doesn't seem to understand.
*edited to add - £10 and £8 are arbitrary figures. Just google european balance of payments for figures.
I can't see how having to transport whisky in aluminium or stainless steel barrels would 'destroy' the industry. In fact I rather assumed it was almost all bottled before it ever left Scotland. It's matured in wood, of course, just like many other alcoholic drinks worldwide. I'm sure there's plenty of Norwegian Aquavit that's transported around the world in wooden barrels before being sold into the EU.
BTW, in the context of traditional ways, it's traditional to refer to the Scottish product is 'Scotch' and not to put an 'e' in whisky.