Brexit Is Teaching Britain A Lesson In Humility; Boris Johnson finalizes EU Exit Deal!

bnew

Veteran
Joined
Nov 1, 2015
Messages
59,310
Reputation
8,782
Daps
164,176

Brexit Is Costing the UK £100 Billion a Year in Lost Output​

  • Bloomberg Economics report marks third anniversary of split
  • Business investment is weaker, labor shortages more acute

By
Andrew Atkinson
January 30, 2023 at 8:00 PM EST

Brexit is costing the UK economy £100 billion a year ($124 billion), with the effects spanning everything from business investment to the ability of companies to hire workers.

An analysis by Bloomberg Economics three years after Britain left the European Union paints a bleak picture of the damage done by the way the split has been implemented by the Conservative government.

Economists Ana Andrade and Dan Hanson reckon the economy is 4% smaller than it might have been, with business investment lagging significantly and the shortfall in EU workers widening.

“Did the UK commit an act of economic self-harm when it voted to leave the EU in 2016? The evidence so far still suggests it did,” Andrade and Hanson wrote in a note published Tuesday. “The main takeaway is that the rupture from the single market may have impacted the British economy faster than we, or most other forecasters, expected.”

The findings chip away at Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s assertion that Brexit is a “huge opportunity” for the UK that’s starting to be realized. Cutting ties with the EU allows Britain to create freeports to spur trade and reform financial services rules to the benefit of banks in the City of London.

“We’ve made huge strides in harnessing the freedoms unlocked by Brexit to tackle generational challenges,” Sunak said in a statement Monday night. “Whether leading Europe’s fastest vaccine rollout, striking trade deals with over 70 countries or taking back control of our borders, we’ve forged a path as an independent nation with confidence.”

The Bloomberg study acknowledges that calculating how much output has been lost due to Brexit is neither “easy nor precise,” not least because leaving the EU coincided with the seismic disruptions caused by the coronavirus pandemic.

However, it is clear that UK economic performance started to diverge from the rest of the Group of Seven following the 2016 vote to leave the EU, and has widened since.


The underperformance is partly explained by business investment as firms put spending decisions on hold because of uncertainty about what life outside the EU would mean. Though some of that caution is dissipating, the UK has a long way to go to close the gap with its major peers. At about 9% of GDP, business investment lags the Group of Seven average of 13%.

The UK economy continues to be blighted by shortages of workers — and Brexit has played no small part.

Hanson and Andrade estimate that there are 370,000 fewer EU workers in employment in the UK than might have been the case had Britain stayed in the single market, a figure only partially offset by the arrival of non-EU citizens.

“Scarcity of labor adds to inflationary pressure in the short-term and constrains potential growth further out,” the economists wrote, “That’s not good news for an economy facing bleak long-term prospects, with trend growth of a little over 1%.”

When it comes to trade, the picture is slightly less negative, with the economists concluding that Brexit doesn’t seem to be leaving a clear mark.

“If for a while it looked like the barriers imposed with the EU in 2021 were driving a wedge between the UK and the G-7’s trade performance, that gap no longer looks as significant,” they wrote.

“Still, trade data has been subject methodological revisions, potentially clouding the comparison. Over the longer term, we would expect trade to bear the brunt of the impact of leaving the single market.”
 

bnew

Veteran
Joined
Nov 1, 2015
Messages
59,310
Reputation
8,782
Daps
164,176

Trump's Scottish golf courses take multi-million dollar hit because of policy he backed​

Matthew Chapman
February 03, 2023

Trump's Scottish golf courses take multi-million dollar hit because of policy he backed

Donald Trump playing golf, as he has about 30 hours a week during his presidency. (Screenshot)

Donald Trump's Scottish golf courses have been hit by a multi-million dollar loss that's being partially blamed on Brexit – a severance from Europe that he celebrated as being great for business.


"Trump’s Turnberry resort in Ayrshire, Scotland, recorded £3.7 million ($4.5 million) in pre-tax losses for 2021, while Trump International Golf Club Limited, parent of another course in Aberdeenshire, Scotland, reported another £697,000 ($853,000) in pre-tax losses," reported Fortune'sAlice Hearing Friday.

"The figures were revealed Thursday in delayed filings, and according to SLC Turnberry, whose directors are listed as Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr., the U.K.’s departure from the European Union is to blame."

Trump was a supporter of Brexit and, in 2016, predicted that "when the pound goes down, more people are coming to Turnberry, frankly."

"But Brexit has impacted the resort’s pool of staff, with lack of access to European staff for businesses in general resulting in greater demand for the individuals previously available to the resort,'" said the report.

"Supply chains were also affected by Brexit and fewer drivers were available, the document states, 'reducing deliveries and the availability of certain product lines. Prices have increased from additional freight and import duty charges.'"

The International Monetary Fund has projected that the U.K. is the only major world economy likely to shrink in 2023, according to BBC this week — with even Russia, facing crippling sanctions over its invasion of Ukraine, possibly seeing some growth. Another forecast from OECD has Russia shrinking, but still has the U.K. performing second-worst behind it.

Amid all this, polling is showing a sharp retroactive decline in support for Brexit, with YouGov finding British voters believe leaving the E.U. was a mistake by a 56 to 32 margin.
 

bnew

Veteran
Joined
Nov 1, 2015
Messages
59,310
Reputation
8,782
Daps
164,176
Economic and social problems have made Britain's third year of "taking back control" a difficult one
8148a3d5f04d4a603f1b5283b32766c4.jpg

Photo: Hannah Mckay (Reuters)

On Brexit's third anniversary, the UK has more reasons to regret it than ever​


The last day of January 2020 was the UK’s last day as a member of the European Union. Though many people didn’t know it yet, covid-19 was around the corner. The combined effect of both the pandemic and Brexit, compounded by the wider regional and global impacts of Russia’s attack on Ukraine, have led to the situation today: Frustration and regret.

A UK that may have gained more independence, but has lost crucial workers and markets that supported its economy. A country with a health service, transport network, and education system experiencing coordinated strikes by employees furious with the government’s handling of everything from pay in hard times, to the very right to strike itself. A government riven by scandal, leadership change, and financial mismanagement, all of which is undermining public confidence. And a public who made a choice back in the 2016 referendum on EU membership, and increasingly wish they’d made a different one.


Jobs, strikes, and pay​

Many of those who campaigned and voted for Brexit talked about the need to protect jobs. Unregulated migration from the EU had pushed down wages and muscled British people out of jobs in sectors like agriculture, building, and healthcare, the argument went.

Seven years on from the vote and three from the ultimate severance of ties with the EU, the UK is going through something of an employment poly-crisis. On the one hand, staff who had kept the National Health Service afloat through years of underfunding have moved back to other European countries, and nurses—who took part in unprecedented strikes last month—doctors, and ambulance staff say hospitals are desperately understaffed to the point of endangering lives.

Strikes have also affected train services for the past several months, as well as university teachers, and now school teachers, leading to the closure of hundreds of schools across the country. Many of the strikes focus on pay, which workers say hasn’t kept in line with inflation; perhaps unsurprising, given that inflation rose above 11% in the UK in October 2022, before falling slightly (but remaining over 10%). The government, meanwhile, is arguing that a shortage of workers is the problem. Labor shortages, in many countries, are pushing wages up, they say. That leads to inflation, which will only be stoked by giving public sector workers enough of a pay raise to support their current standard of living.

While it’s certainly true that other economies are experiencing tighter labor markets, the reasons behind that tightening are to at least some degree local and specific. In the UK, Brexit has potentially sucked thousands of people out of the labor market in the last few years—including EU citizens who have left, those who might have come but didn’t, and UK or other citizens who have decided they prefer to work elsewhere.

In 2016, before the referendum, EU citizens made up between 59% and 77% of all migrants to the UK, according to the the Migration Observatory at Oxford University. That began to fall as soon as the UK voted to leave, and during the pandemic in 2020 led to 94,000 more EU citizens moving away from the UK than to it. This might have bounced back post-pandemic, but the enactment of Brexit at the end of that year put up barriers to prevent it. (Net migration to the UK has still risen in most years since 1991, and was in fact unusually high in 2022, but for specific factors, Migration Observatory said, including the war in Ukraine and a visa scheme for people from Hong Kong.)


Immigration, refugees, and small boats​

Curbing immigration was also an explicit factor in the rhetoric of the Brexiteer camp. Some of this was expressed in relation to jobs, as discussed, some to more amorphous cultural issues, and some of it was explicitly racist: Anger and fear directed at people from different countries and specifically different ethnic groups than the white British majority.

Europe has been experiencing an intense refugee crisis for years, particularly fueled by conflicts in which the West has intervened militarily, including in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, and Somalia. Insulated by being an island, the UK has a relatively tiny number of refugees and asylum-seekers. Asylum applications peaked at just over 84,000 in 2002 before falling dramatically and staying much lower than that every year to date. In 2021 and 2022, however, the number of people crossing the channel from France in small boats—a deeply dangerous and often fatal route—has risen dramatically. A total of 185,000 have crossed to the UK in small boats over time, most in the last three years, according to UK government figures. In 2022, at least 40 died making the attempt.

Brexit has not in itself solved the perceived problem of migration to the UK, or of people seeking asylum; only flows of people have changed, and with the changes different problems have arisen both for the country and for individuals.


How has Brexit affected the rest of the UK economy?​

When it comes to a whole economy, of course it’s possible to find data points to support different theories, to interpret data in different ways. In December 2022, Stéphane Boujnah, CEO of Euronext, Europe’s largest stock exchange group, told Bloomberg that London had lost its place as Europe’s financial center because of Brexit. He cited the data point that primary listings in France, as measured by total market capitalization, had overtaken those in the UK in the previous month. That’s far from definitive proof that London is losing its financial-world status. It’s certainly possible to point to ways in which the UK economy is doing well, and also to point out that problems the country is experiencing—such as high inflation and soaring energy prices—are also happening elsewhere (though they are particularly bad in the UK.)

But it’s certainly also true that these are tough times to be a UK citizen, whether you’re someone on low income struggling to afford food and heat, a homeowner watching mortgage payments skyrocket, or an older person dependent on a crumbling NHS or underfunded social care system. Thus far, it’s hard to see the bright spots of Brexit.


What does the UK public think about Brexit now?​

On Tuesday, data from Transparency International pointed to one of the biggest declines in public confidence in UK institutions since the anti-corruption group began keeping records. The UK fell from 11th place in the world for perceived corruption in 2021 to 18th place in 2023, with those surveyed pointing to multiple government scandals. Brexit wasn’t mentioned in the Transparency report, and may not have featured in the score; but it’s certainly been a big feature of the last seven years for the Conservative Party, which has been in power throughout. The party’s former leader, Boris Johnson, won office on a Brexit platform—and saw it through—before eventually having to resign because a series of scandals undermined the trust of his own party.

Johnson was followed by a short stint in power for Liz Truss, who crashed the economy with a disastrous mini-budgetof unfunded tax cuts in October 2022. Then came Rishi Sunak, one of whose most recent acts has been to sack his party chairman for breaking the ministerial code.

Brexit, in these conditions, has never been more unpopular, with data from non-profit What UK Thinks, which collated a number of polls, suggesting more people now regret the decision than ever.
 

bnew

Veteran
Joined
Nov 1, 2015
Messages
59,310
Reputation
8,782
Daps
164,176
[/U]
148168_AA29224123_1673942939986.jpg

JONATHAN FENTON-HARVEY
17 JAN 2023

As the worst economic crisis in decades squeezes the kingdom, Brits are forced to count the cost of leaving the European Union.​

Despite Brexit once dominating UK political discourse, leading British politicians are now reluctant even to discuss it. Meanwhile, an increasing number of Brits are rethinking the costs of Brexit, including those who voted to leave or didn't vote.

As I write this, we are in between two key Brexit milestones: the day the UK's flag was removed from the European Union (EU) on January 31, 2020, and the end of the transition period for Brexit on December 31, 2020.

For many people being denied hospital treatment amid crippling nationwide strikes in recent months, worsened by a cost-of-living squeeze, it may seem Britain has not fared particularly well in the post-Brexit era.

Indeed, even those who support Brexit have now been feeling “Bregret” – as it's been called in the British newspapers. A recent YouGov poll showed most Brits feel it was wrong to leave the EU, while one in five who voted Brexit now regrets their decision.

Moreover, 65 percent of Brits said they would support holding another referendum on rejoining the bloc. While a smaller number said they would support holding one immediately, it indicates that discussions over Britain's future within the EU could resurface. And should Brexit continue failing to deliver, widespread support for it could eventually go extinct.

Worsening domestic situation

While an eminent Vote Leave pledge was to spend the £350 million ($400 million) per week sent to the EU on the healthcare system, nothing has materialised. Not only is this due to the Conservative Party's neglect of public services – especially the healthcare system – there is also anacute shortage of caregivers since Brexit.

According to research by the London School of Economics, increased bureaucracy and formalities over UK-EU trade from Brexit added £210 to each family household's food bill. Worsening living standards are also a knock-on effect of the stagnating GDP, which is estimated to be 5.5 percent smaller by the second quarter of 2022 than if Brexit had not occured, with a loss of £33 billion ($40 billion).

It's not just the costs that are bothering people. The British Chambers of Commerce said Brexit is "not delivering" after its researchers found 77 percent of businesses surveyed saying that the EU exit hasn't helped their business growth, while a small majority are struggling to adapt to new trade regulations.

Even farmers, who were touted as one of the biggest winners of Brexit, have been unhappy with new trade deals, namely with Australia, as they fear the price of lamb and beef will be undercut by that of Australian produce.

It's true that people across the world are facing similar issues and worsening living standards due to the Covid pandemic and the impact of the war in Ukraine on energy and food staples. Yet, UK's case has been further exacerbated by Brexit, mainly as it's predicted to have the worst economic contraction in the G7 in 2023.

While some have suggested the UK's rapid Covid-19 vaccine rollout was a positive outcome of leaving the EU, it's important to note that while the European bloc tried to encourage member states to follow its own vaccine programme, this was not legally binding. Indeed, Britain still had many freedoms within the bloc, such as being outside the Schengen Zone and keeping the Pound Sterling.

So, what was all this for? While there were many reasons for Brexit – such as fears about immigration and opposition to globalism – the brazen psyche about sovereignty which the now-resigned Boris Johnson's government promoted, is also a key factor.

One of the benefits of Brexit, the British public was told, would be that a sovereign Britain would be free to control its trade deals. And that we could easily replace EU trade with solid economies in the Commonwealth and other fast-growing economies. Other ideas were toyed with, such as promoting the Anglosphere to rival the EU.

Pitfalls of “Global Britain”

While all this sounds ambitious, it has arguably yet to be practical in the real world. So far, the UK has signed a grand total of three new trade deals – with Australia, New Zealand and Singapore. While minister Michael Gove wrongly claimed that the UK had signed 70 new agreements worth £800 billion ($968 billion), these were, in fact, continued or re-confirmed contracts from when the UK was in the EU and therefore do not add extra value to the UK economy.

The Conservative government has often overestimated London's pulling power, and the stalling trade talks with India – despite a deadline set for October 2022, showcase this. While the country is an attractive target, as it has recently eclipsed the UK as the fifth largest economy in the world, ministers in New Delhi may be thinking: “What would we get out of these trade talks?”

Indeed, Britain may realise that trade with India on its own terms and that of other countries is not a guarantee. Britain is also pursuing other trade deals such as with Canada, the Gulf and the US - which would not provide anything substantially new or replace EU trade.

Amid what some commentators in the UK have described as “imperial nostalgia”, many ministers have seemed oblivious that Britain is, in fact, neither a superpower nor no longer an empire.

There are other symbolic moves that are symptomatic of Britain’s global ambitions. Along with Johnson's gambit to play an outsized role in providing military and humanitarian aid to Ukraine amid its war with Russia - while simultaneously hiking its defence budget – goals like Britain becoming a “science and green energy superpower” have been promoted.

However, along with other visions like empowering the Commonwealth, all these plans need money. And should Britain's economy continue to stagnate and domestic pressure for economic reforms grow louder, London may have to rethink its ambitious outlook.

Indeed, the 2021 Integrated Review, which championed the mantra of “Global Britain” and highlighted the Indo-Pacific as a critical target for trade, does not account for last year's economic shocks from the war in Ukraine.

Going forward

As Britain endures these post-Brexit challenges, even citizens across Europe have seemingly become more favourable towards remaining in the EU, according torecent polls. While issues like the Ukraine war may also play a role in uniting Europeans, witnessing the woes of Brexit has prompted people to want to stay in the bloc. Even traditionally Eurosceptic parties like Italy's recently-elected government have focused the debate on reforming the EU rather than quitting it.

While current Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has displayed more pragmatism towards some EU countries, such as France, cross-party MPs also oppose the government's plans to scrap remaining EU laws in Britain.

And as the Tory party crumbled in the last year, Labour's Keir Starmer has called for closer trade ties with the EU, amid speculation that he may even consider a bid to reassess London's ties to Brussels in the probable event his party comes to power.

These new economic and security uncertainties that did not align with Britain's initial post-Brexit ambitions may further prompt the UK to look more towards Europe and scale back its gambit in the Indo-Pacific - as it arguably should.

Indeed, there have been suggestions that the UK may emulate other European models even if it did not rejoin the bloc such as Norway or Switzerland.

Given that the British public is increasingly showing signs of Bregret, this shift will almost certainly continue should Brexit continue failing to deliver. In this case, British politicians may seek honest discussions about reassessing Britain’s ties with the bloc.
 
Last edited:

bnew

Veteran
Joined
Nov 1, 2015
Messages
59,310
Reputation
8,782
Daps
164,176
[/U]

Brexit causes collapse in European research funding for Oxbridge​


Anna Fazackerley
Sat 4 Feb 2023 07.43 EST

Oxford and Cambridge universities, once given more than £130m a year in total by European research programmes, are now getting £1m annually between them

3000.jpg

Cambridge University has seen its post-Brexit funding from EU research grants plummet in the past two years. Photograph: Nicholas T Ansell/PA

One of the UK’s most prestigious universities has seen its funding from a large European research programme plummet from £62m a year to nothing since Brexit, new figures show.

The latest statistics from the European Commission reveal that Cambridge University, which netted €483m (£433m) over the seven years of the last European research funding programme, Horizon 2020, has not received any funding in the first two years of the new Horizon Europeprogramme.


Meanwhile, Oxford, which won €523m from the earlier programme, has only been awarded €2m to date from Horizon Europe.

Britain’s associate membership of the €95.5bn Horizon Europe programme was agreed in principle as part of the Brexit trade deal negotiations in 2020, but ratification was disrupted after the UK failed to implement the Northern Ireland protocol. Such funding is vital to UK universities because it enables research collaborations with institutions across Europe and carries considerable international prestige.

“For higher education and research, there are no new opportunities and no actual possible upsides from Brexit,” said Simon Marginson, professor of higher education at Oxford.

He described Brexit as a “historic error of monumental proportions” and said the new data on Oxford and Cambridge – usually the top performers in Europe – was “very worrying”. The losses reached beyond money, he added, with the UK also becoming less attractive to high-quality European researchers and students.

The government has guaranteed it will cover all successful Horizon Europe grants applied for by the end of March, but after watching the political wranglings for more than two years, many academics are now leaving the UK, saying they no longer believe their vital European research partnerships will be protected.

In August last year, Professor Augusta McMahon, an archaeologist specialising in the Middle East, left Cambridge University, where she had worked for 26 years, to return to Chicago University. Although she was wooed to the US by what she calls “the best job in my field”, she says Brexit uncertainty was a big factor. “I no longer thought the government would either associate [with Horizon Europe] or provide replacement funding,” she said.

With the number of EU students coming to UK universities more than halving since Brexit, she was noticing their decline on campus. Meanwhile, she said fewer European lecturers were applying for jobs here.

Professor Paul Pharoah, who researches the genetic epidemiology of ovarian and breast cancer, left Cambridge after 26 years at the end of last year and now works at Cedars Sinai hospital in Los Angeles.

Pharoah, who was involved in two large EU-funded research projects in the past 15 years, said it was becoming much harder to find funding for his field in the UK: “And the lack of opportunity to apply for EU funding made the outlook even more bleak.”

Gáspár Jékely, a German professor of neuroscience who was based at Exeter University, started work at Heidelberg University last week. He has taken his high-cachet European Research Council (ERC) advanced grant with him.

“The lack of security around European collaborations and funding was one of my reasons for going,” he said. “Recruiting researchers and post-docs from Europe was becoming increasingly hard.” He added: “A colleague of mine at Exeter has just won a prestigious ERC grant, but we don’t know what will happen with it. No one wants to lose a €3m award.”

Last April, the ERC gave 150 grant winners in the UK two months to decide whether to move with their grant to a European institution or lose the funding. In the end, UK Research and Innovation, the government research funding organisation, matched the funding of those who stayed, but one in eight left the UK.

Vassiliki Papatsiba, an education expert at Cardiff University who has researched the impact of Brexit on universities, said the UK might continue to lose talented researchers this way. “Nearly 50% of ERC UK-based grant winners are nationals of a different country, so that would predispose them to outward mobility,” she said.
 

num123

Speak like a child
Supporter
Joined
Apr 30, 2012
Messages
6,764
Reputation
1,778
Daps
27,480
Reppin
Bay Area/Chicago
Ain't no E.U member state ever gonna leave the EU this century. brexit is a world class wake-up call for countries championing isolationism, economic blocs ares the future it seems.
Never count out rank ignorance. No one thought Brexit would get a vote, much less win. People always will find a way to screw themselves when there are much better options to choose from.
 

bnew

Veteran
Joined
Nov 1, 2015
Messages
59,310
Reputation
8,782
Daps
164,176
Never count out rank ignorance. No one thought Brexit would get a vote, much less win. People always will find a way to screw themselves when there are much better options to choose from.
even though boris and nigel name gets mentioned all the time, david cameron doesn't get enough blame cause he's the one who was in power and didn't have to entertain their demands. he quit as soon as shyt got real knowing he fukked up.
 

hashmander

Hale End
Supporter
Joined
Jan 17, 2013
Messages
19,448
Reputation
4,842
Daps
83,343
Reppin
The Arsenal
i remember those pro brexit fukks being pissed that obama had the gall to show up there (cameron begged him to come and attempt to save his ass from this stupidity) and tell the brits that they would go to the back of the queue for a trade deal with the US if it left the EU. turns out he wasn't trying to scare them, was just telling the truth.
 
Last edited:
Top