Agreed -- a free-trade bloc is doable and was done. They got more ambitious, and, for whatever reason, moved into territory in which there were going to be lots of unforseen consequences. As with anything else though, whatever approach you choose will have strengths and weaknesses, and a full cost-benefit analysis is appropriate. What's not appropriate is focusing on one flaw and ignoring others. If you applied that approach to everything then nothing would be good.
The best anti-remain piece I saw was what talent posted a few weeks back, but it still doesn't match up to the hard numbers. The hard numbers tell a clear story, which is that, warts and all, Britain wold be better off within the EU. We'll see what happens from here. The negotiated exit followed up by the question of how to handle trade will be interesting. The EU's relentless need to compromise could lead to it giving Britain favorable enough terms to reengage without formal membership, and remake the economic assumptions. But that's just an on-paper potential outcome.
You can blame the EU idea for Greece, but you cannot blame the current body. Blame Germany for that. Germany's failure to perform a cost-benefit analysis, and insistence on focusing on one factor, may be remembered as a catalyst for moving the accepted norms on what to do with a sovereign with a balance-sheet crisis. The IMF won't likely be there in the future to fight on behalf of the Washington Consensus. Merkel won the battle but it's Yannis Varoufakis who may end up winning this war, so to speak.
The best anti-remain piece I saw was what talent posted a few weeks back, but it still doesn't match up to the hard numbers. The hard numbers tell a clear story, which is that, warts and all, Britain wold be better off within the EU. We'll see what happens from here. The negotiated exit followed up by the question of how to handle trade will be interesting. The EU's relentless need to compromise could lead to it giving Britain favorable enough terms to reengage without formal membership, and remake the economic assumptions. But that's just an on-paper potential outcome.
You can blame the EU idea for Greece, but you cannot blame the current body. Blame Germany for that. Germany's failure to perform a cost-benefit analysis, and insistence on focusing on one factor, may be remembered as a catalyst for moving the accepted norms on what to do with a sovereign with a balance-sheet crisis. The IMF won't likely be there in the future to fight on behalf of the Washington Consensus. Merkel won the battle but it's Yannis Varoufakis who may end up winning this war, so to speak.
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