If you want access to the EU markets, you play by their rules.
Only the rules to do with product safety and product standards compliance.
Not the majority of the TFEU rules which are for political union members only.
UK inefficiency was more to blame, but keep with the EU blaming.
Inefficiency couldn't be reformed without state aid.
EU rules make it harder to provide that aid.
Mainly down to improper regulation, which your tame experts are calling for less of now.
It is the EU which provides the bulk of improper regulation.
Your manufacturing sector doesn't do that well worldwide.
It does better than it does in the EU.
So? The UK is expensive and inefficient.
Partly because of EU rules and wasteful financial contributions to the EU.
You overfished and couldn't compete.
Continental fishing trawlers overfished, our boats could not compete.
As members of the EU we had to allow access to our waters.
So what? It's cheaper to operate abroad, something that's not going to change because of Brexit unless the Conservatives actually manage to destroy the unions (as they hope).
So you want to kill off manufacturing in Britain ?
What's with the chocolate fixation?
I like chocolate, don't you ?
And soon we won't have to levy customs tariffs on cocoa.
Yes, and the process is accelerating.
No, there is uncertainty, but to date no big manufacturer has left because of the referendum.
To compensate for their inefficiency?
To provide time to reform and return to profit and to provide funds for survival. It was done for the banks, so why not steel ?
No, it isn't. Unless you're in banking it's a terrible bureaucratic quagmire of inefficiency waste and in some cases corruption.
the UK is having a tantrum and will have to face the consequences.
The consequences being,
freedom, opportunity, not being part of the EU military programme, being able to decide our own customs tariff policy, full self governance over UK tax policies.
Freedom to nationalise anything the UK wishes to, so if we want, the railways could be returned to 100% state ownership, the NHS could be too.