There
is no doubt about it.
We
are living through what promises to be one of the most momentous events of the
21st Century; Brixit is gathering an unstoppable momentum, and
hopefully Dave is sufficiently shrewd to realise that he can either go with it
or be crushed by it.
The
change in the weather has been breath-taking. Until very recently, Europhobia
was the ‘crime that dare not speak its name’. An ambitious Tory MP would not
dare to express other than undiluted admiration for all that Brussels stands
for. After tearing itself apart over Europe post-Thatcher, the Tory party
expunged it from the agenda.
All
that has been turned upside down. If a Tory MP so much as hints that he is all
in favour of Brussels, not only will he commit himself to a life on the
back-benches but his constituency members will turn him into hamburger, such is
the level of antipathy.
It
is said that over 260 Tory MPs are for total withdrawal. There must be others
who are for renegotiation.
Out
there in the real world, the latest YouGov poll gives 49% in favour of ‘out’
and 32% in favour of ‘in’.
So
what’s it all about? Tricky, because it is vastly more complex than the Daily
Wail would have you believe.
For
starters, I reckon that there are three options, not two, which are ‘in’,
‘out’, and ‘renegotiate’, but a referendum will almost certainly not introduce
the third and if it did it would be read as ‘stay’. But there is a place
for the third option, which I will set out later. And at this point let’s
dismiss Cameron’s cynical outpourings about being ‘no better than Norway or
Switzerland’. He is again showing his patrician contempt for the ordinary
voter.
These
have the highest GDP per person in the whole of Europe, and both export
proportionally more to the EU than does the UK. And in terms of quality of life
the UN reckons that Norway is #1 in the world.
So
let’s examine the pros and cons of each of the options.
In.
British
farmers would lose £27 billion in CAP subsidy.
The
motor industry could be seriously affected. Component manufactures and supply
chains could be affected in both directions. Ford and GM might be at risk
because both supply components for assembly in Germany (this might kill off GM
in Germany because it is the sick man of the company). JLR would be little
affected as it has only a small EU market share.
Most
of the Japanese cars made in England are exported to the EU.
British
Aerospace, the world’s second largest outside the US, might lose business to
France.
Labour
mobility might suffer, upon which our high-tech business is very dependent.
The
financial services industry could be badly affected if access to Europe became
more difficult.
Out.
First
up is cost. It is said that our gross contribution to the EU budget is above
£14,000,000, but I believe that the net cost is in the region of £8 million*,
still higher than Osborne’s first round of cuts. That would be a total saving
in the event of withdrawal.
The
annual cost of EU regulations is more than the benefits of the single market by
perhaps £1 billion.
By
not having the Common Agricultural Policy, surely the first amongst EU
money-wasting scams, there would be a very large reduction in our food
bills.
We
would no longer have the obscenity of dead fish being thrown overboard to suit
EU quotas that are routinely ignored by other countries – have you seen the
price of fish lately? We would resume authority over fishing up to the 200 mile
limit or the median, which would give us a majority stake in the North Sea. And
we would be in total command of our own agricultural policies.
The
Working Time Directive, which limits work to48 hours a week and has caused
chaos in the NHS and elsewhere, would be one of the first regulations to go.
The
UK could set less onerous ‘green power’ targets, leading to cheaper power.
The
regulation on the insurance industry, which will cost women up to 30% on their
car insurance and increase their annuity premiums, all in the name of misplaced
‘equality’, would be scrapped.
We
would be100% empowered to pass our own laws without EU meddling. We don’t
actually know how much of our legislation emanates from Brussels but in Germany
it is over 80%. Neither would we suffer interference from the ECJ. We would no
longer be subject to the appalling European Arrest Warrant and the risk of
being hauled off to some corrupt Eastern European hell-hole at the behest
of a bent magistrate.
We
would be free to negotiate our own trade agreements with other countries. As
Cameron is belatedly beginning to recognise, much of our economic destiny lies
with the Commonwealth, as if history is beginning to re-wind.
My
take.
The
‘out’ case is based on reasonable certainties. The ‘in’ case is largely based
on possibilities, not probabilities. It is too much ‘might’ and not enough
‘will’. Much of it is speculative and based on a rather incoherent fear of
‘isolation’.
I
am unconvinced by the supposed impact on manufacturing industry. It is correct
that Honda, Nissan and Toyota came to England as a springboard into the EU.
They are not going to decamp suddenly to France or Germany. If there is any
major shift at all, which I doubt, it will take decades for any real effect to
be felt. In any case, I believe import duties are only 4%, hardly cataclysmic.
I
doubt whether the EU would be able to impose punitive tariffs on the UK partly
because such issues are subject to global conventions through the WTO, and
partly because two can play at that game.
I
set little store on the BAe argument. GKN is the only firm in the world capable
of the high tech manufacture of carbon fibre wing spars, and the outcome of
severing of ties with Aerospatiale would likely to be the revival of the Boeing
tie-up, blocked because of US mistrust of France.
Continuation
of the single market would be in the interests of Europe as a whole. The UK has
run a balance of trade deficit since joining the ECM. The Europeans are not
about to sacrifice that lucrative trading position out of pique. It is said –
by Dave amongst others – that Europe takes 50% of our exports. This is not
true. We export more to non-EU countries; this is not necessarily because they
have increased but more because our exports to EU have fallen off due to the dire
state of the Euroland economies.
Currently,
we are tied to a moribund, over-regulated and stagnant European economy.
Renegotiation.
I
would keep this off the agenda at this time for tactical reasons.
Here
is how it might play.
When
(not if - he has a tiger by the tail now) Dave holds the referendum and there
is an ‘in’ majority, that would be the end of the uncertainty, but Dave would
still be expected to negotiate on issues such as the repatriation of 100 crime
and policing laws before the opt-out closes, the exemption from new
financial regulation as the EU progresses towards banking union, and limiting
UK financial support to the poorer states only.
If
there is a Brixit majority, it will take a period of maybe three years to
completely effect withdrawal; it’s not just a case of ‘flag down and cheerio’,
because the whole wretched edifice must be dismantled brick-by-brick.
During
this time the UK will have the opportunity to negotiate from a position
of strength, because if the EU does not concede our reasonable demands, such as
a reversion to the status quo ante Maastricht then its ‘goodbye’.
There
would then be a second referendum to accept or reject the deal.
Reversion
to a ‘Common Market’ would be heavily supported by the British people. Only 26%
would favour ‘out’ if this were to happen.
But
an ‘out’ decision would have a consequence that to many people might outweigh
the financial and economic considerations.
We
would no longer be shackled to an anti-democratic, bureaucratic, meddling and
corrupt monster.
*I
have scoured the EU financial reports for up-to-date figures. It’s a hopeless
task. Transparency is unknown in Brussels.
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