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Matt's avatar

The thing that should really concern everyone, of course, is the Japan data. Why? Because it illustrates the significance of what is at stake in trade policy that certainly wasn't the case in 1823 where Tory MPs still seem to live. Specifically: nobody, aside from in a handful of low-value sectors (relative to total trade and investment flows) exports finished products anymore, and much of what they do trade is invisible (labour, data, design, services). Countries are embedded in complex production networks - in which products are created by dozens of intermediary processes taking place globally - and these proliferate wherever there is regulation governing them. The most important regulatory architecture, from our perspective, is the European Single Market. It was our membership of that which saw huge amounts of Japanese investment and trade, because the UK was a platform for inserting Japanese firms into continental European production networks (where data, people, capital, components move back and forth seamlessly). Why bother continuing to trade with or invest in Britain if that's no longer really possible?

The irony is that, because Tory MPs are so rooted in the 18th and 19th Centuries, they won't get this. They'll be puzzled about why a brilliant FTA with Japan isn't generating new trade, because they still believe that trade is about countries exporting their finished products between each other, when, in fact, the few things we do trade in that way are low-value (rice, whisky) when compared to the serious stuff of high-tech services. But then they'll cheer and have their dated prejudices reinforced when they see that UK-NZ trade has led to some increased lamb and butter imports which are a total drop in the ocean, yet very painful for our individual farmers, and a glaring indicator of an overall relative terms of trade loss due to investment in the sectors that really matter (or will matter in future) continuing to stagnate.

It is inconceivable that the Britain can continue to play the role of a platform into the EU now given that we are no longer party to single market regulation, and nor can we really establish our own production networks given that the scale of future technological development (e.g. in hydrogen, batteries etc.) can only really be achieved on a continental (i.e. EU, US, China) scale. If we're not plugged in, we're out, and for every tonne of lamb we export at greater cost into Europe, we will be suffering a gradual, but continued, relative decline in competitiveness and terms of trade of the sort that plagued Latin America in the 1970s.

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willconqueror's avatar

Brexit is a religion, Nick, you need to have faith. Otherwise you become a doubter and any hope of redemption, as in your case, is gone. You have got to believe!

I'm in my 70's now Nick and I have some experience of religion. While folk can believe whatever they want and deal with the consequences the downside is that non-believers are brutally exposed to the reality that such beliefs inflict on others. Brexit and sovereignty are a classic example as freedom exists, meaning we do what we want when we want and 800bn of trade is but a side benefit.

Back to religion and to a story that has haunted me for years. A person I grew up with told me that he was regularly abused by a priest up to the age of 16 but he always felt god would come to his rescue, alas not so! (He took his own life in his 40's)

Brexit is a different kind of abuse but it is abuse of millions of innocent citizens of the United Kingdom and the perpetrators are living in their beautiful fantasy.

Keep up the good work Nick and thanks.

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