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  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,400

    Last time I checked there were 20+ classifications of milk under the CET.
    Milk is insane. (I have just discovered.)

    All milk is categorised by both proportion of milk fat / proteins and starch / glucose, resulting in a positively ridiculous number of product codes. At the low end, some milk gets tariffs of as low as 4%. Others get charged close to 100%. (This is for the EU.)
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,400

    Assuming the average is weighted by what they actually trade in, is that a major factor? If the EU produced what South Korea does, would its "average tariff" be higher?
    It's weighted by what they actually import. If you import a lot of raw materials (i.e. oil, aluminium, etc.) then your average tariff is dragged down by the fact that commodities typically aren't subject to tariffs.

    This, in particular, drags down the China number, as they import ridiculous quantities of raw materials. Still, despite that, China still charges an average of 3.5%.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    rcs1000 said:

    So London is better off after Brexit, and the North East worse off.

    Interesting. Or simply wrong.

    One of the two.
    More than that - London is better off with No Deal.

    It’s good of the London based Remainers to offer to take a hit to support the rest of the country
  • rkrkrk said:

    If you change the number of people - you change the gdp figure too.

    Also the evidence suggests increased immigration means increased productivity actually gdp per head likely to be lower...
    You miss the point. Which is, did the disputed study assume that the UK population post Brexit would be lower, and built it into its forecasts, thereby naturally arriving at a lower GDP but not GDP per capita? It is the latter and not the former which is the measure of our average collective economic wealth as individuals. If not we would consider the people of China to be the wealthiest in the world.

    On your second point. In fact all the evidence suggests that increased unrestricted immigration from within the EU coincided with the point at which UK economic productivity stagnated. Not surprising - cheap labour came to make more economic sense than productive capital investment, which is why you don't see automatic car washes anymore. Most developed countries in the world restrict their migrants to prioritise mainly those with useful skills, but not the UK with regard to the EU.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,400

    You miss the point. Which is, did the disputed study assume that the UK population post Brexit would be lower, and built it into its forecasts, thereby naturally arriving at a lower GDP but not GDP per capita? It is the latter and not the former which is the measure of our average collective economic wealth as individuals. If not we would consider the people of China to be the wealthiest in the world.

    On your second point. In fact all the evidence suggests that increased unrestricted immigration from within the EU coincided with the point at which UK economic productivity stagnated. Not surprising - cheap labour came to make more economic sense than productive capital investment, which is why you don't see automatic car washes anymore. Most developed countries in the world restrict their migrants to prioritise mainly those with useful skills, but not the UK with regard to the EU.
    Of course, most hand car washes seem to be using illegal Albanian labour these days...
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,884
    Sean_F said:

    The economy has grown by 2.8% since June 2016. I am not convinced it would have grown by 4.8%, were it not for the Brexit vote. No one was predicting that sort of growth rate in early 2016.
    Cost of Brexit is relative to base case, per the report. You can't assign world growth or lack of it to Brexit. The growth is in the eurozone, ironically and that's pulling us up, for now.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,400

    New Thread!

  • I actually have quite a bit of understanding for the Leavers who are saying, in the face of these projected figures, that they had bigger considerations than just trade and economics in deciding their vote. I have to say that such things were not high on my list of considerations either. I voted Remain mostly on sovereignty, social and idealistic grounds - so I can't really fault Leave voters for doing the same and nor will I try to.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    brendan16 said:

    As Robert Kennedy once said GDP measures everything except that which makes life worthwhile. 'It measures neither our wit nor our courage, neither our wisdom nor our devotion to country or family'.

    It's macro and most people don't see how it benefits them directly as its benefits are not evenly spread. Iran has a higher GDP than Norway - but it's not as happy or as wealthy.

    Maybe that's the problem - still fighting using the same arguments that failed in June 2016. Or to put it another way there is more to life than money. What use is earning double when prices have risen ten fold?

    https://www.theguardian.com/news/datablog/2012/may/24/robert-kennedy-gdp
    Not everything that counts can be counted; not everything that can be counted counts
  • Awb683Awb683 Posts: 80
    If it helps to stop Labour then I'm keen to get on with it.
This discussion has been closed.