Hlafordlaes
Disorder of Kilopi
I tend to agree which is why I wonder what the final outcome of all this will actually be. We can't identify a purely UK economy so we have no real view on its dependencies and key probability factors, we have no idea demographically how much immigration the nation needs, we don't know which trade deals will suit us best and replace what may be lost by Brexit. Moving a market further away to Africa or India etc will cause companies extra costs in logistics and many of the smaller companies who trade well in the EU do not have the necessary skills to trade in emerging markets. in addition, we don't even know what steps will need to be taken to protect the interests of our own citizens working in Europe, this is all based on some political aspiration without facts and on some arrogant assumption that the rest of the world really needs the UK. You can only suggest that anyone who started this project without already a planned exit approach was and is completely idiotic.
The last time I saw a statistic quoted, The City and related financial industry as a whole accounted for 20% of the economy. From what I read these days, depending on the attitude of the EU, this could literally evaporate in short order, and contingency plans are ready and standing by to be triggered in the industry.
You do not lose 20% of any economy and do well. That sort of hit alone, plus the devastating psychology/impact of plummeting real estate prices in London, could prove rather deadly.
In other news: If May gets in, it seems she would push for delay tactics wrt triggering Art 50. My short reaction: it sounds, tactically, like an interesting option, thinking only from the British perspective. It is, however, stoopid, not to mince words. This is the one thing guaranteed to piss the EU off to no end, especially if the Austrian reelection goes the wrong way.
Delaying Art 50 dangles a Damocles sword over everyone, the UK included. Not a good idea to make ambivalent gestures. Brexiters should exit, Remainers push for early declaration, then use 2 years to show exit is worse, and find a way to bail before 24 months are up. This is the honest and fair way to proceed. It will likely not take long, IMO, for public opinion to strongly go back to remain after Art 50 is triggered and The City starts to implement at least the first stages of financial jobs transfers, and other sorts of rumblings begin around the country.
Remain can count on one thing in its clear favor: the negative impact of Brexit will be far more immediate and politically sonorous than any purported new dawn of growth from free trade down the road. Time to push things to their logical extreme and take the immediate hit, which will be the least of all evils.