Quote:
Originally Posted by thommy
the costs of the brexit will be the smallest problem.
not to deal within a union and to deal with the EU ONLY when you producing stuff what meets the EU rules will be the much bigger problem.
shipping costs will also increase and the costs for companies who want to deal with the EU will also have higher costs and they will at least move a part of their activities into the EU to prevent all the bureaucracy.
there is really nothing what makes sense on this brexit - thatīs why the better name for it is brexitus.
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Again you show your ignorance. Any nation that trades with another has to comply with the rules of the importing country's rules on those goods.
Do companies in non-EU countries have to move part of their activities into the EU to prevent all the bureaucracy? No, so again you prove to be clueless.
The UK has no problem with complying with EU trade rules, the UK objects to EU laws, the European Court of Justice, the EU membership fee. n 2007, five countries - Germany, France, Italy, the UK, and Spain - contributed nearly half of the budget. In fact, Germany alone - Europe's largest economy - paid more than the 19 lowest-paying member states combined. Do those countries get half the votes?
Sefcovic launches bid to be EU Commission president. Europe must have a robust foreign policy and nurture high-tech industries, Slovak EU commissioner Maros Sefcovic has said in his bid to succeed Jean-Claude Juncker as the next European Commission president. A Slovak President.
