Monday, June 20, 2016

Brexit? Further personal analysis

Further personal analysis 20/6/16

I have continued following the debate and seeking to find out more on underlying issues. I haven’t identified anything which would change my analysis, although I have acquired more information. The Remain campaign has particularly focussed on economics, minimising or ignoring the sovereignty issues, which could have far greater impact. Even on economics, all is not as they would have us believe, with financial risks of Remaining often simply ignored. Economists have been presented as if they can predict the future. From their past record, they can’t! .

1.       Sovereignty

#         Ambrose Evans Pritchard (Business Editor of the Daily Telegraph) wrote an interesting article on 13 June entitled “Brexit vote is about the supremacy of Parliament and nothing else: Why I am voting to leave the EU” in which he said

”Stripped of distractions, it comes down to an elemental choice: whether to restore the full self-government of this nation, or to continue living under a higher supranational regime, ruled by a European Council that we do not elect in any meaningful sense, and that the British people can never remove, even when it persists in error.

We are deciding whether to be guided by a Commission with quasi-executive powers that operates more like the priesthood of the 13th Century papacy than a modern civil service; and whether to submit to a European Court of Justice (ECJ) that claims sweeping supremacy, with no right of appeal.

The Project bleeds the lifeblood of the national institutions, but fails to replace them with anything lovable or legitimate at a European level. It draws away charisma, and destroys it. This is how democracies die.”

         Aspects where the EU already holds exclusive or shared competency (i.e nations either cannot legislate or must accept supremacy of all EU edicts) include trade, fisheries, social policy, economic, social and territorial cohesion, agriculture and fisheries, environment, consumer protection, transport, energy, tax, migration, crime, civil liberty, security and justice (per Wikipedia). Not a lot left! But there are further plans under consideration including introducing EU taxes on energy, VAT and banks.

         EU lawmaking is cozy and opaque. Lobbying is endemic with the Guardian in 2014 reporting this to be a multi-billion industry employing over 30,000 lobbyists in Brussels alone, influencing 75% of legislation. Business obviously believes this is more effective for them than democracy. The annual output of thousands of laws and regulations is produced behind closed doors with no transparency or reporting on the process and results in decisions which cannot be amended or appealed by any Government or citizen.

However, there seems to be substantial sympathy for this system from politicians, intelligentsia and experts, possibly considering that they should be the decision makers whilst avoiding scrutiny from the public. Unfortunately the schemes of experts often fail to live up to their expectations and it is ordinary people who suffer as a result.

2.       Risks of remaining in the EU

The substantial risks of remaining may not have been sufficiently recognised. It is human nature to take the freedom and economic status we enjoy for granted. It is not and what we think we have may already be in danger. Britain is particularly at risk as our economy and traditions are not in line with most of Europe. For example, our government and courts are different (more democratic), we are far more international in our trade, far more reliant upon services as part of our national economy (and far more likely to be paying in support to the EU).

         The EU struggles to co-ordinate its response to any emerging issue and constantly does so by greater centralisation and diminishing the role of states.

         Rich Eurozone members have ‘walked by’ on the other side whilst economies of southern Europe have been wrecked by misguided EU policies. (The ongoing 40-50% youth unemployment in countries such as Greece, Italy and Spain is a disgrace and a disaster.) European banks and countries are expected to struggle to pay debts and Britain will not be able to avoid fallout when obligations cannot be met.

         EU budget spending is spiralling, with a €20bn budget deficit currently and more to come. Member states cannot paying these costs.

         The migrant crisis is growing and however sympathetic one is to the situation, it has the potential for massive costs and social impact on the EU. In France the army is reported to be already fully deployed in protecting Jewish and other targets against potential terror attacks.

         Uncontrolled migration of European passport holders has a cost for the UK. Even if beneficial for business, this impacts employment housing and services for ordinary people. Given that there is no mechanism of control this could have unforeseeable future consequences.

         Accession of Turkey would be a costly enterprise and given the increasingly repressive and Islamist nature of the Turkish government such aspects of the project are fraught with danger.

         The burden of regulation and tariffs on imports from outside the union consistently decreases efficiency and increases costs for the consumer.

3.       Christian

         Christian groups such as Prophecy Today and Intercessors for Britain have a focus in the hand of God upon nations and from this perspective are in favour of leaving, having consideration for aspects such as sovereignty, the secular nature of the EU project and its growing antipathy to Israel.

# If you believe in the gift of prophecy it is worth considering these excerpts from a prophecy published on the web from David Noakes last December

"Rather than rely on Me and my faithfulness to you, you chose, for worldly purposes, to join yourself to an institution which has denied my Name and refused to acknowledge Me in its councils. My fierce anger is upon that institution on account of its rebellion, its defiant rejection of me and its hardness of heart towards my ancient people Israel.

I warn you now that the European institution will not repent, even though I bring disaster and destruction upon it. I urge you, O Britain still beloved by Me for the sake of your godly forefathers, come out of her, so that you may not be caught up in that same destruction, for I am even now arising in judgment to bring to nothing what she has sought to achieve. If you will separate yourself from her declared rejection of God, I will have mercy upon you and restore my hand of protection; and I will use you once again to bring light to many lost in the darkness which is now steadily increasing.


Hear Me, O once godly nation and respond to my call, or you also will come to ruin in that same judgment of destruction. This is not my will for you, but you must choose the course which you will take. I urge you to respond to Me and choose life under my hand of discipline and protection, rather than death in the disaster which is even now coming upon Europe."

         Since the Magna Carta power has been constrained in the UK and the principles of “no taxation without representation” and checks and balances on exercise of authority have been enjoyed. In the Civil War Cromwell and his model army were primarily non-conformists and sought to establish a system of Government where the people had a strong influence on government and legislation (which we enjoy to this day, with increasing numbers progressively enfranchised). The Christina aspect of this approach is emphasised in the ‘Coronation Oath’ which the monarch takes promising to govern in line with God’s laws. The EU does not begin to acknowledge such principles and was, in fact, designed to bypass the power of electorates (considering that they could not be trusted). Whilst it may be currently be benign, since power is divorced from representation, it is gaining the power to govern as a supra-national dictatorship.

4.       Financial

Warnings from David Cameron and George Osborne have become progressively more strident to the point that fellow Remainers Jeremy Corbyn and Nicola Sturgeon have publically warned them against their exaggeration. Former Tory Chancellors (Nigel Lawson and Norman Lamont) and the former Governor of the Bank of England Mervyn King take a different view and back leaving.

         Lord Rose (Chairman of Remain) told The Times that ‘“Nothing is going to happen if we come out of Europe in the first five years, probably. There will be absolutely no change’.

         Neil Woodford has confirmed that he is standing by his analysis (which I quoted previously) and that in the scale of economic threats, Brexit is not unduly significant and that ultimately he doesn’t expect a material impact one way or the other.

         Michael Geoghegan, former Head of HSBC, wrote in the Telegraph on Saturday ‘Leave: It is absurd to suggest Britain cannot thrive outside the EU' in which he dismisses the alleged benefits of remaining and instead emphases the risks, stating 

“Remaining inside is very worrying for British competitiveness, jobs and prosperity. The financial system, on which everyone in Britain and all its businesses depend, is probably the most vulnerable part of the economy.

Clearly, the headline costs to the taxpayer are going to increase. Brussels is running out of money and that is likely to mean a substantial rise in the UK’s £10bn net contribution.”

Other risks he identifies include costs to support potential Greek debt costs, bank rescues, , underwriting of Eurozone  costs and financial tax transaction costs of £4bn for UK pensioners and savers.

         Norman Lamont recently published an interesting article entitled “Not only can Britain leave the EU and have access to the single market, we'd actually get a better deal” Extracts follow:
“The impression given is that the EU single market is a walled garden and that we and the other members have some special silver key that gives us privileged access to its delights that others cannot access.

But this is wrong. Every developed country has access to the single market. The EU has a relatively low external tariff with the exception of certain goods such as agriculture. The inconvenient truth is that non-members of the EU have often exploited the single market far more successfully than we have.

The importance of trade deals can be exaggerated. Countries primarily succeed with or without trade deals if they produce goods of high quality and services that other countries want to purchase. In the modern world, tariffs between developed countries are low and are small compared with movements in exchange rates. The flawed myth of the single market is that is that it is seriously advantageous to its members. The paradox is that non-members have managed to benefit from it more than members.

There may be arguments for remaining in the EU but they do not revolve around the single market. On trade we have nothing to fear but fear itself. Which is exactly what the Remain campaign has been attempting to stir up.”

An analysis has been issued showing that if we were to export to Europe without any agreement, we could still be better off, in that the minimal tariffs under WTO rules would be less than the membership contributions we currently pay.


Personally I would expect some initial uncertainty if Britain votes to leave, although ultimately there could be significant upsides economically if we can avoid some of the current senseless regulation and put good policies in place (for example removing the tariffs the EU currently requires us to impose, agreeing international deals which the EU has failed to progress over the past 30 years and a introducing an intelligent migration policy).