Random1 wrote: Wed Dec 30, 2020 12:00 am
fishfoodie wrote: Tue Dec 29, 2020 11:32 pm
Sandstorm wrote: Tue Dec 29, 2020 10:39 pm
If you leave the club, you’re outside in the cold looking in at the other nations enjoying roast dinner.
Remainders told ‘em this repeatedly.
And as you say it's not just the club that can now decide to retaliate if they think you're trying to gain an advantage.
Lets say the scenario someone suggested earlier came to pass; & the Government decided to effectively nationalize & subsidize an aircraft manufacturer, to keep some of those jobs afloat. It wouldn't just be a case of the EU retaliating, with tariffs; it would also be anyone else who sees an opportunity to improve the position of their native aircraft industries, against a state subsidized competitor.
If the UK was in the EU; then other Nations might pause, & consider the consequences, because they wouldn't want to risk tariffs on something else, important, that they export to the EU, & didn't want to get into an escalating series of tariffs.
Yeah, but that would just mean we would need to subsidise/nationalise things internal to us.
Our energy maybe, broadband, water, railway etc.
That wouldn’t impact trade (at least not in a demonstrable way to the arbitration panel) and therefore wouldn’t trigger sanctions.
I think the torries will potentially “invest” rather than subsidise in companies trading externally, for example, that satellite firm they bought a controlling share in last year.
Cheer up guys; any change = opportunity; let’s grab it.
There's no such thing as, '
internal', anymore.
Look at your own list; Energy; the UK still wants to be part of the EU Energy market, & export & import energy when it suits the UK. Doesn't EDF have a significant position in the UK energy market ?
Railway; where do the railways buy their rolling stock from ?; the market for locos is global; if you decide to buy them from a national manufacturer, regardless of their competition; then you are putting your fingers on the the scales of competition, & you can expect the competition to be pissed.
Broadband; as a service you have a number of providers who are International, & if someone like BT is also selling broadband in the EU, they could be using their, unfair, monopoly position in the UK to subsidize their operations in the EU.
Companies have spent the last 40 odd years creating economies of scale, & trying to build a business that spawned across the whole EU, so they could get the best of all those Nations; & now the UK is expecting to stand up on January 1st, with no legacy of those decisions .... not going to happen !