Jeez, the bus, still ?. Let it go people, move on.
But it promised all that money to the nhs ????
Jeez, the bus, still ?. Let it go people, move on.
There is no time limit when it comes to political debate.............unless you’re the oppositionJeez, the bus, still ?. Let it go people, move on.
Er...That/those scenario/s were predictions for after we had left. There has indeed been negative effects, though less than predicted - even considering the £4500 was an 'up to' figure grabbed by both sides as the 'real' figure (fear mongering by Osborne/Remain and ridiculed by Leave).What about all the people losing their jobs, households being £4500 worse off, and all the other scare storys that would happen in the first six months if we voted leave from Osborne. Its pointless regurgitating all this stuff now.
Its on Boris and his team to sort out the future
the rift has been caused by both sides , people are entitled to protest and demostrate - the reaction to some of them has resorted in violence which has escalated
Insults thrown both ways , derogatory comments - all part of the divide between the two , and it won’t heal for a long time
The bus was excellent marketing - it was a clear subliminal message and it worked
What else do you think this means
“We send £350mil a week to the EU , Lets fund our NHS instead “
As said it’s an excellent clever marketing statement that was used very well by the leave campaign.
The money grabbed the attention - then NHS statement sealed the deal and people were thinking of that extra money going into the NHS - it was a very clever marketing message to grab votes and it worked , not sure why people deny it - and it won’t be forgotten about as well by many others
Yet it still worked - imo!The £350m was debunked long before the vote. It was ridiculed long before the vote. Even prominent Leavers were distancing themselves from it long before the vote.
...
Exactly, the best think us “Leavers” could do is not to bite everytime it’s mentioned.Yet it still worked - imo!
Even the publicity about it being untrue gave it 'free' advertising!
No they wernt, they were predictions made by Osborne that would happen straight after a leave vote. When I have the will I willl dig out the links.Er...That/those scenario/s were predictions for after we had left. There has indeed been negative effects, though less than predicted - even considering the £4500 was an 'up to' figure grabbed by both sides as the 'real' figure (fear mongering by Osborne/Remain and ridiculed by Leave).
Here's a length summary (from Wikipedia) of the real effects since the referendum - not pretty reading imo. It's extremely rare to have what seems to be almost universal agreement from economists!
Immediate impact on the UK economy
According to one study, the referendum result had pushed up UK inflation by 1.7 percentage points in 2017, leading to an annual cost of £404 for the average British household.[7] Studies published in 2018 estimated that the economic costs of the Brexit vote were 2% of GDP,[8][9][10] or 2.5% of GDP.[11] According to a December 2017 Financial Times analysis, the Brexit referendum results had reduced national British income by 0.6% and 1.3%.[12] A 2018 analysis by Stanford University and Nottingham University economists estimated that uncertainty around Brexit reduced investment by businesses by approximately 6 percentage points and caused an employment reduction by 1.5 percentage points.[13] A number of studies found that Brexit-induced uncertainty about the UK's future trade policy reduced British international trade from June 2016 onwards.[14][15][16][17][18] A 2019 analysis found that British firms substantially increased offshoring to the European Union after the Brexit referendum, whereas European firms reduced new investments in the UK.[19][20]
Short-term macroeconomic forecasts by the Bank of England and other banks of what would happen immediately after the Brexit referendum were too pessimistic.[21] The assessments assumed that the referendum results would create greater uncertainty in markets and reduce consumer confidence more than it did.[21] A number of economists noted that short-term macroeconomic forecasts are generally considered unreliable, as they are something that academic economists do not do, but rather banks do.[22][23][21][24] Economists have compared short-term economic forecasts to weather forecasts whereas the long-term economic forecasts are akin to climate forecasts: the methodologies used in long-term forecasts are "well-established and robust".[21][22][24][25]
Long-term impact on the UK economy
There is overwhelming or near-unanimous agreement among economists that leaving the European Union will adversely affect the British economy in the medium- and long-term.[a][39] Surveys of economists in 2016 showed overwhelming agreement that Brexit would likely reduce the UK's real per-capita income level.[40][30][31] 2019 and 2017 surveys of existing academic research found that the credible estimates ranged between GDP losses of 1.2–4.5% for the UK,[39] and a cost of between 1–10% of the UK's income per capita.[27] These estimates differ depending on whether the UK does a Hard or Soft Brexit.[27] In January 2018, the UK government's own Brexit analysis was leaked; it showed that UK economic growth would be stunted by 2–8% for at least 15 years following Brexit, depending on the leave scenario.[41][42]
According to most economists, EU membership has a strong positive effect on trade and, as a result, the UK's trade would be worse off if it left the EU.[43][44][45][46] According to a study by University of Cambridge economists, under a hard Brexit, whereby the UK reverts to WTO rules, one-third of UK exports to the EU would be tariff-free, one-quarter would face high trade barriers and other exports risk tariffs in the range of 1–10%.[47] A 2017 study found that "almost all UK regions are systematically more vulnerable to Brexit than regions in any other country."[48] A 2017 study examining the economic impact of Brexit-induced reductions in migration" found that there would likely be "a significant negative impact on UK GDP per capita (and GDP), with marginal positive impacts on wages in the low-skill service sector."[49][27] It is unclear how changes in trade and foreign investment will interact with immigration, but these changes are likely to be important.[27]
No they wernt, they were predictions made by Osborne that would happen straight after a leave vote. When I have the will I willl dig out the links.
Heres one to be going on with.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-eu-referendum-36355564
The PM has declared that the additional NHS funding will be made law!...
Er...That/those scenario/s were predictions for after we had left. There has indeed been negative effects, though less than predicted - even considering the £4500 was an 'up to' figure grabbed by both sides as the 'real' figure (fear mongering by Osborne/Remain and ridiculed by Leave).
Here's a length summary (from Wikipedia) of the real effects since the referendum - not pretty reading imo. It's extremely rare to have what seems to be almost universal agreement from economists!
Immediate impact on the UK economy
According to one study, the referendum result had pushed up UK inflation by 1.7 percentage points in 2017, leading to an annual cost of £404 for the average British household.[7] Studies published in 2018 estimated that the economic costs of the Brexit vote were 2% of GDP,[8][9][10] or 2.5% of GDP.[11] According to a December 2017 Financial Times analysis, the Brexit referendum results had reduced national British income by 0.6% and 1.3%.[12] A 2018 analysis by Stanford University and Nottingham University economists estimated that uncertainty around Brexit reduced investment by businesses by approximately 6 percentage points and caused an employment reduction by 1.5 percentage points.[13] A number of studies found that Brexit-induced uncertainty about the UK's future trade policy reduced British international trade from June 2016 onwards.[14][15][16][17][18] A 2019 analysis found that British firms substantially increased offshoring to the European Union after the Brexit referendum, whereas European firms reduced new investments in the UK.[19][20]
Short-term macroeconomic forecasts by the Bank of England and other banks of what would happen immediately after the Brexit referendum were too pessimistic.[21] The assessments assumed that the referendum results would create greater uncertainty in markets and reduce consumer confidence more than it did.[21] A number of economists noted that short-term macroeconomic forecasts are generally considered unreliable, as they are something that academic economists do not do, but rather banks do.[22][23][21][24] Economists have compared short-term economic forecasts to weather forecasts whereas the long-term economic forecasts are akin to climate forecasts: the methodologies used in long-term forecasts are "well-established and robust".[21][22][24][25]
Long-term impact on the UK economy
There is overwhelming or near-unanimous agreement among economists that leaving the European Union will adversely affect the British economy in the medium- and long-term.[a][39] Surveys of economists in 2016 showed overwhelming agreement that Brexit would likely reduce the UK's real per-capita income level.[40][30][31] 2019 and 2017 surveys of existing academic research found that the credible estimates ranged between GDP losses of 1.2–4.5% for the UK,[39] and a cost of between 1–10% of the UK's income per capita.[27] These estimates differ depending on whether the UK does a Hard or Soft Brexit.[27] In January 2018, the UK government's own Brexit analysis was leaked; it showed that UK economic growth would be stunted by 2–8% for at least 15 years following Brexit, depending on the leave scenario.[41][42]
According to most economists, EU membership has a strong positive effect on trade and, as a result, the UK's trade would be worse off if it left the EU.[43][44][45][46] According to a study by University of Cambridge economists, under a hard Brexit, whereby the UK reverts to WTO rules, one-third of UK exports to the EU would be tariff-free, one-quarter would face high trade barriers and other exports risk tariffs in the range of 1–10%.[47] A 2017 study found that "almost all UK regions are systematically more vulnerable to Brexit than regions in any other country."[48] A 2017 study examining the economic impact of Brexit-induced reductions in migration" found that there would likely be "a significant negative impact on UK GDP per capita (and GDP), with marginal positive impacts on wages in the low-skill service sector."[49][27] It is unclear how changes in trade and foreign investment will interact with immigration, but these changes are likely to be important.[27]
Same applies to your post!You state "It's extremely rare to have what seems to be almost universal agreement from economists!"
Selected material I assume you recognise these articles are not referred/cross checked or pretend to be balanced so are entirely the author's opinion - I think a bit of research from recognised authoritative bodies would hold more weight. I could find other references that would provide countering views.
Its interesting to note that London Estate Agents report a backlog of buyers and banks declared international investment interest and commitments have already risen.
The stock market is up as is sterling
No it didn't!But it promised all that money to the nhs ????![]()
Didnt sterling take a referendum spike.Same applies to your post!
Has there ever (since the referendum) not been a backlog of buyers in London - even when the market has been described as 'depressed'?
Sterling is still below the pre-Referendum rates against both Euro and USD!
But Hey-Ho, at least Bozo now has a sufficient majority to 'Get Brexit Done', so needs to get on with it (plus the trade deal) and start applying all the benefits that 'independence' brings! Meanwhile Labour's inability to recognise and address the reasons for their loss will mean there's little effective opposition - not a situation I'm looking forward to! While somewhat right of centre, I simply don't trust Bozo's ability to 'run the country' very much, though I hope I'm wrong!
Do some looking for your self.Didnt sterling take are referendum spike.
Just getting back to somewhere near where we were is not really acceptable is it.You state "It's extremely rare to have what seems to be almost universal agreement from economists!"
Selected material I assume you recognise these articles are not referred/cross checked or pretend to be balanced so are entirely the author's opinion - I think a bit of research from recognised authoritative bodies would hold more weight. I could find other references that would provide countering views.
Its interesting to note that London Estate Agents report a backlog of buyers and banks declared international investment interest and commitments have already risen.
The stock market is up as is sterling