But of course a person of such privelidge and high demeanour with a posh voice must be right. — Punshhh
Benkei
2.1k
↪Tim3003
Good agreements are win-win propositions for the parties. So no, it doesn't balance out. — Benkei
It depends if there is a meaningful vote or what the balance of MPs in the house is after the election. Perhaps the referendum result will be binding. If Corbyn can get it through these hurdles there is no reason to presume that the electorate will choose the leave option. The mood and demographic has changed a lot since 2016. — Punshhh
By 'balance out' I meant that the nett of gains/losses will be the same for each side - not that neither side will gain overall. — Tim3003
The problem is when there is a trade imbalance to start with, and the side in deficit (ie the USA) wants to redress that and gain more than it loses. — Tim3003
Apparently, it's acceptable to call for people like that to be put down. You might imagine death threats are unacceptable, but it seems not.
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/nov/04/tories-back-candidate-francesca-o-brien-benefits-street-remarks-gower
Mogg was eligible to be put down. — Punshhh
Also Corbyn might be able to engineer a second referendum not requiring such parliamentary consent by having binding options on the ballot paper. Which the government would be legally required to implement. I'm no constitutional expert, so this might not be right. — Punshhh
It's not established among economists whether a trade deficit is a benefit or not. The trade accounts for services and goods are a fraction of capital flows nowadays. The effects a trade deficit used to have aren't there anymore, allowing countries like the UK and US to run trade deficits for years without that causing issues for their economies.
On the far end of that spectrum is Milton Friedman who says trade deficits will never be a problem because ultimately the money will flow back; after all, dollars can only be spent in the US (more or less). — Benkei
Works for me!
I'm no economist, but in a trade deficit situation, money is flowing out of the country and goods coming in. The money doesn't depreciate - infact it can be invested by the exporter to grow, but the goods do, so isn't the country importing gradually getting poorer relative to the one exporting?
And as I said, if the US deficit with China is no problem, why is Trump pursuing a trade war to correct it? I thought Trump's rationale was that by undercutting US prices the Chinese are taking away US jobs and industries, as they flood US markets with cheap goods. — Tim3003
Well, once a group of companies dominate a market, new rival competing enterprises don't emerge as the ideal free market theory would predict. Real world economy doesn't work that way. You see, after forcing out other competitors from the market those previous competitors won't be competing in the R&D sector etc.If the Chinese subsidise their industry, so what? — Benkei
But what he is saying is a word salad of hollow sound bites floundering accusations and slurs about his opponents. — Punshhh
But I don't have high hopes for them: their fascist government will squash free thinking in the end and that will be their Achilles heel in the global competition. — ssu
It is interesting that you suggest Corbyn can't be trusted. Can you suggest what things he can't be trusted on? Also, you imply that he will talk nonsense, or ingage in Tory like tactics. Any example of that? — Punshhh
— Terrapin StationI don't live in the UK, but I'm in favor of there eventually being world unification/a one-world government... — Terrapin Station
Think instead of Star Trek’s United Earth government, which ended poverty, disease and war within fifty years.Dream on. That'll never work. The world is too big a place, with multiple conflicting interests. There will always be a great number of those who would oppose unification and prevent it from happening. And if it became corrupt, it would be harder to topple. That actually makes me think of The Empire in Star Wars. — S
As for Labour’s Brexit policy, it guarantees a second referendum, which would produce a more informed decision, and would therefore move the national mood towards unity and harmony. Support for having a second referendum has risen to neck and neck (for and against: 43% each). — Chris Hughes
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