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http://www.airsoft-forums.co.uk/index.php/topic/30013-should-the-uk-leave-the-eu/Well Sacarathe if you would like to lead us down a more political path I'm sure it would be fascinating the debate that arises I just didn't know if this was the place to do it so I stuck to the question in the op about the cost of guns from Poland. I have seen EU debates and they dont always end civilised!![]()
If you look at Norway, they are not in EU, yet to be in EU market trade they need to contribute around £400 milion a year, don't expect Britain not to pay. Not to mention that one of the requirements to benefit from EU trade is open border.Honestly, being a UKIPPER you could say i was biased, but if we negotiated free trade deals with the EU which is the plan, it shouldn't really be affected, we could also get free trade deals with other countries such as japan and china etc who manufacture a lot of the airsoft stuff, which could make it cheaper!
Wel strike me down with a feather I had no idea it had already been so well debated. Thank you interesting read.http://www.airsoft-forums.co.uk/index.php/topic/30013-should-the-uk-leave-the-eu/
I can't see any way airsoft could be uniquely affected by a Brexit.
trying not to get into a EU debate, doing that on a daily basis at the moment on the campaign trail XD but i have to bite, being the 5th biggest economy, having a massive economic trading deficit with the EU, they will want to negotiate a free trade agreement with us, if not the eurozone and the eu common market will go even more south. Also being the world leader in "soft power" (diplomacy) im sure we can negotiate a free trade agreement with the eu common market and with the rest of the worldIf you look at Norway, they are not in EU, yet to be in EU market trade they need to contribute around £400 milion a year, don't expect Britain not to pay. Not to mention that one of the requirements to benefit from EU trade is open border.
Macro economics is extremely complex, and it's not something I claim to understand but what this does boil down to (as in every case) is who needs who more. Unfortunately as a net importer we rely heavily on raw and processed materials from Germany and eastern Europe in particular for our own light industry. If you honestly think that the EU needs the UK more than the UK needs EU imports then I have some numbers for you. I know they're boring, but they really matter. Too many people are voting from emotion on the 23rd and I think that's chiefly down to numbers not really being easy to digest or being particularly well presented by either camp. If you go straight to the source on a lot of these figures then you'll find they speak for themselves.trying not to get into a EU debate, doing that on a daily basis at the moment on the campaign trail XD but i have to bite, being the 5th biggest economy, having a massive economic trading deficit with the EU, they will want to negotiate a free trade agreement with us, if not the eurozone and the eu common market will go even more south. Also being the world leader in "soft power" (diplomacy) im sure we can negotiate a free trade agreement with the eu common market and with the rest of the world![]()
Well, that is a good argument, and im not going to keep debating on here, but i respect your post for thinking it through, we just simply dont agree on everything, but thats how it is with the EU referendumOf all the threads, we picked this one to get involved in the EU debate. Sorry![]()
Macro economics is extremely complex, and it's not something I claim to understand but what this does boil down to (as in every case) is who needs who more. Unfortunately as a net importer we rely heavily on raw and processed materials from Germany and eastern Europe in particular for our own light industry. If you honestly think that the EU needs the UK more than the UK needs EU imports then I have some numbers for you. I know they're boring, but they really matter. Too many people are voting from emotion on the 23rd and I think that's chiefly down to numbers not really being easy to digest or being particularly well presented by either camp. If you go straight to the source on a lot of these figures then you'll find they speak for themselves.
I sympathise, because for a lot of people this is the culmination of a lot of different factors, but going purely by the statistics as they stand right now I'd never see the UK leaving as being tenable economically - even if the social benefits are arguably the reason why a lot of people want out. The EU is chiefly a trade partnership that's beginning to shift towards a federation but is - at its core - still resolutely a free trade zone and will be for years to come.
The most key value here is that UK exports make up 3% of Europe's GDP. Not negligible, but not huge - It actually puts us at the 6th largest exporter to other member states. Again, not nothing but nothing like Germany or France. Our biggest trade partner for exports is still the US (11%) - this might seem like good news, but the amount we import from the EU right now is scary: ~50% of our net.
This site does a really good job of breaking down economies into nice infographics: http://atlas.media.mit.edu/en/profile/country/gbr/
Here's a graph on imports/exports. Again, you can see the deficit - we rely on EU imports a lot more than EU exports. Whilst initially this is good news for the economy should we leave (less reliant on having to export to the EU), it significantly lowers any bargaining position for the UK.
-snip-
Here's a good article on this that sources itself properly: http://www.niesr.ac.uk/blog/after-brexit-how-important-would-uk-trade-be-eu
tl;dr: UK relies a lot on EU imports. Tariffs are going to kill us and negotiating a better deal will be nigh-on impossible as we just don't have the numbers to back it up.
If you've not already guessed: I'm right now going for 'staying a member'. The immigration crisis, the petty laws and the slightly erroded sense of British identity are all going to be forgotten topics in 20 years, but what won't be is giving up being a founding member of a potentially semi-federalised body with what is - as of 2014 - the 2nd largest GDP on the planet.