Bank of England experts outline how Brexit destroyed the UK economy

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  • čas přidán 18. 11. 2022
  • Not news but Brexit absolutely decimated the lives and institutions of Britain, as senior figures in the Bank of England outline in the Treasury Committee.
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Komentáře • 1,5K

  • @pierrelalanne9461
    @pierrelalanne9461 Před rokem +87

    Surprisingly, in France, politicians who were actively promoting "Frexit" after Brexit was successfully achieved, have now completely stopped doing so. "Frexit is not our project at all !" claimed the french extreme right leader in April. 😂

    • @rhythmstic
      @rhythmstic Před rokem +3

      Why would they? Germany has to pay French farmers Bns of Euros to support the CAP, the French farmers would riot if they lost German subsidies.

    • @TheMolabola
      @TheMolabola Před rokem +1

      @@rhythmstic Germans are not paying for French subsidies France is a net contributor.

    • @MR-intel
      @MR-intel Před rokem +2

      @@rhythmstic
      Brexit was about "Let's take back control. We want our country back." Remember? The French could make the exact same claims. But they know they are lies.
      Britain is now controlled by corporations.

    • @LMB222
      @LMB222 Před rokem +6

      It's all over Europe. Nobody is talking about leaving the EU anymore.
      I'd like to use the opportunity to thank Vladimir Vladimirovich for herring rid of the whining UK, and at the same time strengthening Europe. Two birds with one stone!

    • @LMB222
      @LMB222 Před rokem +1

      @@rhythmstic Germany? Netherlands is the country that pay the most per Capita.

  • @glenbert1396
    @glenbert1396 Před rokem +92

    I'm a Brit living in Germany since 2010 and I run a small business here. Before Brexit I would order materials from the U.K. , the prices were competitive and delivery was quick. Since Brexit, it no longer makes sense to order from the U.K. The prices are not as competitive but the most problematic part is that delivery is often delayed considerably, due to customs issues. I can't rely on receiving orders on time. This causes real problems for my business as I order materials for specific projects with tight deadlines. With inflation currently at about 10%, my primary concern is how to maximize my savings/retirement fund of about £600k which has been sitting duck since forever with zero to no gains.

    • @baileymclean8186
      @baileymclean8186 Před rokem +1

      That is everywhere. The problem is, with a rising labor shortage, that industry will be the hardest hit. Fundamentally, restaurants as an industry are only viable with cheap labor and cheap rent. Right now, we have neither.

    • @louisairvin3052
      @louisairvin3052 Před rokem

      @Stanley Edwin Heard it's a good time to buy and basically I've just got cash sitting duck in the bank and I’d really love to put it to good use seeing how inflation is at an all time-high, who is this coach that guides you, mind I look them up?

    • @roseroland1998
      @roseroland1998 Před rokem +2

      @@baileymclean8186 when England was in Europe, imports were much faster because there were fewer checks and also at a lower price. now everything imported from England costs almost double due to taxes.

    • @Phil-bc2sd
      @Phil-bc2sd Před rokem

      Glen Bert I used to order parts from Germany but because of Brexit they were to expensive and to much hassle I sent 1 of the parts to America for an American fabrication company to see if they could produce a similar part that would be fit for purpose they sent me samples and cost and the samples were perfect and the cost was cheaper than I had been paying from Germany jeez even with shipping costs and after the initial lead time I am now saving thousands of pounds a quarter THANK GOD FOR BREXIT OR I WOULD STILL BE PAYING FAR TO MUCH I have since done the same for other parts I use in my products which I was importing from the eu and I’m over the moon business is booming and my staff got a fantastic Xmas bonus thanks to Brexit

    • @leme5639
      @leme5639 Před rokem

      @Churchill By the end of this decade,, countries like Slovenia or the Czech Republic will have a higher GDP per Capita than Britain. CANZUK does not matter.

  • @anthonygrayson7753
    @anthonygrayson7753 Před rokem +193

    Finally, people are discussing the massive elephant in the room!👍

    • @utubebroadcaster
      @utubebroadcaster Před rokem +11

      Nah, it's all project fear.. right? right?...

    • @MarroniMusic
      @MarroniMusic Před rokem +1

      @@utubebroadcaster Yes. Every economy on earth is in turmoil, and the government/s are doing it on purpose. They didn't shut down the economy for two years for 'health reasons' LOL. They're planning to completely restructure / reset the population.

    • @lostinfrance9830
      @lostinfrance9830 Před rokem +18

      The fact they still skirt around it after all this time with wording like "I'm gona bring the B word in" is ridiculous.

    • @mikeg2939
      @mikeg2939 Před rokem

      Finally? Swati Dingra never shuts up about it.

    • @mikeg2939
      @mikeg2939 Před rokem

      @@flood291 yeah, funny that they filmed this before the full committee was present to challenge them. A set up to further feed the already brainwashed.

  • @thomasrobinson4401
    @thomasrobinson4401 Před rokem +403

    This is what happens when people vote, whose comprehension of economics, is what they read in the Sun or the Daily Star. Bless 'em.

    • @Lee_303
      @Lee_303 Před rokem +14

      It's not all about economics.

    • @thomasrobinson4401
      @thomasrobinson4401 Před rokem +29

      @@Lee_303 What the Bank of England is discussing, is.

    • @HCP5
      @HCP5 Před rokem +39

      @@Lee_303 Yeah, it was about "TaKiNG BaCK CoNTRoL"
      How's that working out for you?

    • @thomasrobinson4401
      @thomasrobinson4401 Před rokem +5

      @@HCP5 I'm rich, it's not going to affect me. How's it working out for you?

    • @aleccap5946
      @aleccap5946 Před rokem +3

      So spending less coming away from the EU makes us poor ???? There's me thinking the EU had to find that extra 10 billion quid they shouldn't be getting from us any more ?

  • @MrLoaded2012
    @MrLoaded2012 Před rokem +28

    The only hope I have is that Scotland and Northern Ireland can leave ASAP, since this was mostly an English-created (and, to a lesser extent, Welsh but no-one really cares) disaster.

    • @o0xTHEcoPlayerx0o
      @o0xTHEcoPlayerx0o Před rokem +1

      basic geography, scotland has to trade through england to trade with the EU.
      not only that but scotland doesnt have its own currency.
      scotland literally couldnt be a member of the EU without england at the present.... it would take a decade at the least as they jump through hoops just to meet the requirements too apply.
      not only that but the inflation in europe will increase in the coming years, more european countries sourced their energy imports negligently than those who were dilligent.
      the entire world is currently paying the price for that, not just the EU.
      honestly the country i fear for most at the moment is norway, for the longest time they've maintained a very intelligent balance between their energy sector and other economic sectors.
      countries that become reliant on their energy sector tend to end up like venezuela.
      i really hope after decades of dilligent and intelligent management, this european mess thats been created wont hit norway in the face.
      because they did everything right. -everything- and now they are being pressured to export more oil heavily.
      i just pray it doesnt end up biting norway in the ass, as currently they are one of the best beacons of a successful democracy.

    • @mpwaterhouse
      @mpwaterhouse Před rokem +3

      A significant majority in London/Greater London also voted remain (higher than Wales), not sure that area can secede though (or vote SNP for that matter)!

    • @LMB222
      @LMB222 Před rokem +1

      Give the sheep fuсkera a break.
      The Welsh claim they voted against Brexit, and cite the large number of English pensioners as the reason.

    • @mpwaterhouse
      @mpwaterhouse Před rokem

      @@LMB222 You could be on to a bigger issue: if the ~ 2.5M 16-18 year old votes were allowed during 2016 Brexit the UK would have tilted the balance to remain based on extending the age demographic of 79% of 18 - 21's voting to remain! Ironically only 40% of the over 65 and a mere 30% of over 75 voted to remain considering most of that demographic would not even still be alive to reap the benefits or suffer the consequences of that decision!

    • @trytellingthetruth.2068
      @trytellingthetruth.2068 Před rokem +1

      @@mpwaterhouse
      It is estimated that only 36% of young people voted in the referendum. Which means 64% did not bother. Of that 36%, it is estimated that 70% voted to remain. So only 27% out of every 100 eligible to vote, voted to remain. 64% of young people eligible to vote, couldn't be bothered to go out and do so.

  • @donaldstewart9827
    @donaldstewart9827 Před rokem +14

    Scotland and the six counties of Ulster voted to stay in Europe, England voted to leave and the so called "UK" then left, so we can take it without any hesitation that England is actually the UK.

    • @rhythmstic
      @rhythmstic Před rokem

      You failed to mention they all voted to stay in the UK. Not everyone in NI, Scotland & Wales voted to stay in the EU.
      btw the EU is not Europe, Britain is still in Europe .

    • @roberthamilton4726
      @roberthamilton4726 Před rokem +1

      Until you fully fund your own budget, yes, England will be the Power of the UK.

    • @cleess2836
      @cleess2836 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Basically it is. But there's a way people can regain their sovereignty: dissolve the UK.

    • @stuart3878
      @stuart3878 Před 2 měsíci

      Never quite understood the relationships that the UK countries had with each other. The Brexit decision further confused the matter. ie. Why was it ok for the UK (England) to enforce its particular understanding of democratically on the countries within the countries held inside the Union of the United Kingdom, who as independents with their own parliaments can't express their democratic wishes when it comes to issues that don't suit the English sector of Government. Non-democratic democracy, how democratic is that? And we dare to complain about how the EU apply their understanding of it.

  • @alfreddunn03
    @alfreddunn03 Před rokem +23

    What happens to the 300 million that was going to the NHS very week when we left?

    • @oralogarro9932
      @oralogarro9932 Před rokem +7

      Went out the window

    • @obtuse1291
      @obtuse1291 Před rokem +3

      Since we've been out for years now that must amount to, oh, a big big sum of money by now. 🤣🤣

    • @georgegoldsmith8261
      @georgegoldsmith8261 Před rokem +3

      Yeh Boris had that on his bus.So Boris NHS Fixed now?

    • @bambina5604
      @bambina5604 Před rokem

      They go to border control and customs

    • @trytellingthetruth.2068
      @trytellingthetruth.2068 Před rokem

      Show me where it said 300 million was going to the NHS very week.
      Or have you confused it with,
      "LETS fund our NHS instead".

  • @xblue1476
    @xblue1476 Před rokem +84

    Note from Germany: but at least you took back control, got the Empire back and got rid of all those lazy foreign farm workers, plumbers, waiters and nurses. Rule Britania (minus Northern Ireland and Scotland).

    • @davidwatson2399
      @davidwatson2399 Před rokem +7

      I gather that is sarcasm

    • @kth6736
      @kth6736 Před rokem +1

      Its good that fredrich here hasn't lost his sense of humour even after spending weeks chopping firewood from the jungle...
      I know brexit is horrible and farage swindled the brexit gammon but rather rich of a german to make fun of it when german politicians fooled not just the germans but the whole continent and now people are going to freeze to death.

    • @sueyourself5413
      @sueyourself5413 Před rokem

      @@kth6736 It was 25°C today, I doubt I'll freeze. Germany doesn't control the continent's energy supply, you bellend. ^^

    • @NotAnIlluminatiSpy
      @NotAnIlluminatiSpy Před rokem +3

      Jokes on you, German....At some point...Presumably.

    • @kth6736
      @kth6736 Před rokem

      @@sueyourself5413awww you hurt. Just make sure the swastika clad gam-gam doesnt freeze this winter. Kisses xoxo...

  • @huwgriff91
    @huwgriff91 Před rokem +3

    You don't get it... all we wanted was bendy bananas! The bananas are bendy again, rule Britania!

  • @MrTomr316
    @MrTomr316 Před rokem +43

    The elephant taking a giant dump in the room is now being discussed. Thank god

  • @oralogarro9932
    @oralogarro9932 Před rokem +17

    My sister lives in Ireland and she told me any talk of leaving the EU like we say on my island there would be war.😅😅😅😅😅😅

    • @jailbreak852
      @jailbreak852 Před rokem +1

      The animosity toward England isn't surprising. Probably not helpful, but unsurprising

    • @greenknitter
      @greenknitter Před rokem +22

      @@jailbreak852 I'm Irish. It has nothing to do with feelings about England and everything to do with the knowledge and understanding of the enormous benefits EU membership has brought to this country since we joined in 1973. Leaving the EU would be economic suicide, as it has been for Britain.

    • @oralogarro9932
      @oralogarro9932 Před rokem

      @@greenknitter the same thing my sister said.

    • @oralogarro9932
      @oralogarro9932 Před rokem

      @@jailbreak852 king Charles would be the head of my island i would prefer harry other than William because his wife and children looks like us.

    • @nooboftheyear7170
      @nooboftheyear7170 Před rokem +2

      @@oralogarro9932 that is just silly imho. I doubt you are even a person of colour.
      I'm also pretty sure that kate didn't offend meghan but meghan thought that her status in the acting world and the little sucess that she was something more than she was and she found out that over here she was nobody special, hence running back to the states.
      I could even imagine meghan's "who are you again?" to kate when she offered to help.
      Still... it doesn't mean that she can't apologise, even on the down low or quietly, so to speak. And I, from what I've seen, would take william and kate any day of the week. Not sure if wills is as naive as he used to be but more study and getting more 360⁰ knowledgeable on issues will help I'm sure. For example, there has to be a balance called practical environmentalism and that must take into account rather than rely on scientific and historical information.

  • @anthonyferris8912
    @anthonyferris8912 Před rokem +108

    As a Brit living in the UK I know one thing, I now buy much my British produced foods from my local German owned discount supermarket, that unlike other UK chains, goes out of its way to stock British produce.

    • @-BY205
      @-BY205 Před rokem +23

      Did you vote for brexit??? The germans get something for every English carrot 🥕 sold in the German UK shop ... Nice thank you for supporting Germany 🇩🇪 🙏

    • @aivaraspaltanavicius9311
      @aivaraspaltanavicius9311 Před rokem +2

      😂😂😂

    • @aivaraspaltanavicius9311
      @aivaraspaltanavicius9311 Před rokem +3

      @@-BY205 😂😂😂

    • @Zerpentsa6598
      @Zerpentsa6598 Před rokem +2

      But a lot of EU products.

    • @anthonyferris8912
      @anthonyferris8912 Před rokem +1

      @@Zerpentsa6598 From around the world and.mostly China.

  • @HarryR1
    @HarryR1 Před rokem +6

    So, it looks the Turkeys did vote for Christmas after all.

  • @stephenwalker850
    @stephenwalker850 Před rokem +32

    Well done farage you bloody berk

    • @neo69121
      @neo69121 Před rokem +1

      bless his little british heart

    • @robtyman4281
      @robtyman4281 Před rokem

      He is one of the super wealthy who is benefiting financially from BREXIT - suprise surprise.
      Yet he convinced millions of ignorant, brainless idiots that he was 'anti-establishment'! ...when he was very much 'the establishment' despite not being in government or even an MP.
      So many people have been severely 'gaslit' by both the Tories, and people like Nigel Farage.

    • @Letsgo-sg4cy
      @Letsgo-sg4cy Před rokem

      Whenever I see his face on the screen my anger goes up faster than inflation.

  • @glenquinn6853
    @glenquinn6853 Před rokem +8

    The problem is the UK government's never invested in the UK in the last 4o years

    • @ThePhilippinesWayofLife
      @ThePhilippinesWayofLife Před rokem +1

      oh they did invested in to there own pocket's

    • @rhythmstic
      @rhythmstic Před rokem

      Everywhere I look there are Wind Farms sprouting up. Govt investment being sucked up by German mnf as Siemens, they have just completed a gas pipeline to Norway and another energy line is being built to Morocco. We have amazing nuclear submarines our manpads stopped the Russkies in their tracks or rather blew their turrets off, we have new destroyers, long range torpedoes, we invested in graphene early on, there is HS2, smart motorways, drone swarm technologies, intelligence gathering, street cams everywhere, there is quite a lot going on actually ..

    • @blue_jay31
      @blue_jay31 Před 11 měsíci

      Thank you ,that is exactly the true ! To see that U.K. has fallen so far behind ! To ride the old trains was a kind of fun ,but to everyday not so much. Sad to thing a country could fall so behind and yet the country did have the money and give it all away!

  • @Ghhyuttgg
    @Ghhyuttgg Před rokem +71

    People knew this, and they accepted it, as the price they were willing to pay to be free of the shackles of the EU. Not sure what those shackles were.

    • @amacuro
      @amacuro Před rokem +12

      I think people were willing to risk a bit of their economy if that meant less foreigners to interact with on a daily basis.

    • @scottamolinari
      @scottamolinari Před rokem +8

      Only standarization across and with all other European countries. But, I believe the main goal or promise of Brexit was to be able to better control borders or more importantly and more specifically, the influx of immigrants (i.e. reduce that influx). Everything else, all the "negatives" that were clearly told as a warning, weren't important enough to outweigh keeping the migrants out. Very dumb thinking in the end.

    • @slackster999
      @slackster999 Před rokem +7

      The thrust of the Brexit campaign was that it would be beneficial to the Economy not that there would be a cost and price to pay.

    • @jonathanodude6660
      @jonathanodude6660 Před rokem

      @@amacuro yikes, did they think they'd get *less* foreigners by exiting the deal that allowed the government to send foreign migrants entering the UK away to sweden and germany? no wonder theres so much noise about record numbers of immigrants in the uk that have constantly kept increasing after brexit due to the lack of infrastructure to move them away.

    • @teniente_snafu
      @teniente_snafu Před rokem +7

      Some half-hearted actions on undermining tax dodging. EU-wide standards on workers rights, customer rights and environment protection. Very minimal standards even the poorest countries would be able to adhere to. Yet way too much for Brexiters.

  • @richardlongmore9301
    @richardlongmore9301 Před rokem +12

    Everyone in the uk has given up can the last person to leave turn the lights off

    • @chrism415
      @chrism415 Před rokem +1

      We were taken over by foreign parasites quite some time ago. Every government for more than a century has been controlled.

    • @richardlongmore9301
      @richardlongmore9301 Před rokem

      @@chrism415 yep I agree💯I also think that the labour / conservative thing is all just for show to give the illusion that we have a democracy.

  • @williampatrickfagan7590
    @williampatrickfagan7590 Před rokem +103

    Airdog,
    The Irish pay more into the European Union ( per person) than the UK did. Ireland has no problem in doing so.
    The Irish export 33,% of its total exports to the European Union.
    This compares to about 10% before we joined.
    There is more to membership than subscriptions.
    The Brexshiteers knew the price of everything and the value of nothing.
    Our e onomey will shrink as a result of the war and interest rates, but we will not go into recession like the UK.

    • @Choober65
      @Choober65 Před rokem

      Sadly, yes you will, as the Irish banks are controlled by the brits. 1916 traded political subjugation of the Irish, for monetary subjugation, NOTHING more.
      All is manipulated for the bankers benefit in collusion with the judiciary and financial regulatory authorities.

    • @ianwheeler7513
      @ianwheeler7513 Před rokem +11

      Love your comment the price of everything and the value of nothing, brilliantly spot on.

    • @martinmold1051
      @martinmold1051 Před rokem +7

      Who cares?What's your point?If the UK democratically decides to leave the EU that's their choice.Ups and downs.50 million Brits will go and live in Ireland? Don't think so..It's about sovereignty..I think you think you know something about that.We are glad we're out, I understand you and you understand us..'The price of everything and the value of nothing' Very true.It is good to be free.

    • @Whizzy-jx3qe
      @Whizzy-jx3qe Před rokem +6

      @@martinmold1051 Good to be free when you’ve nothing left in your pocket. You ignore the fact that successive British governments have chosen to pool aspects of the country’s sovereign power in the EU in order to achieve national objectives that they could not have achieved on their own, such as creating the single market, enlarging the EU, constraining Iran’s nuclear programme, and helping to design an ambitious EU climate change strategy.

    • @Steeler-wg5zo
      @Steeler-wg5zo Před rokem

      @@martinmold1051 Must be great to do more business with 'economic dwarf states' now than with Europe on your doorstep. How can you be so stubbornly stupid?

  • @1man1bike1road
    @1man1bike1road Před rokem +98

    farage doesnt care he knew all along

    • @claretblue2509
      @claretblue2509 Před rokem

      Knew what?

    • @tomlxyz
      @tomlxyz Před rokem +11

      Farage basically knowingly spread incorrect information so the media would address it but that also gave it more attention

    • @neo69121
      @neo69121 Před rokem

      yeah he will be sipping tea in his mansion driving around in astons like a true british degenerate

    • @cambs0181
      @cambs0181 Před rokem

      Oh hes on to his next stir up shit project, down Dover in a boat pointing out the refugees.

    • @claretblue2509
      @claretblue2509 Před rokem +1

      @@tomlxyz and what would that be?

  • @shawnkristoferu8303
    @shawnkristoferu8303 Před rokem +76

    I wrote a couple of years ago on CZcams that logically Brexit would be disaster due to followings:
    1. England has very little manufacturing so manufacturing goods imported would be more expensive.
    2. There is inadequate farming in England to feed the English people. This is mostly due to the weather. You simply can’t grow oranges or pineapples in England. Since they will be imported they would be more expensive post Brexit.
    3. England’s financial services which is the biggest money maker to the country would suffer as London would no longer be the financial centre of Europe. It would be Frankfurt.
    Thus expenses would increase while revenue would shrink. That makes the country poorer.

    • @esoekidjo
      @esoekidjo Před rokem +6

      You were spot on.

    • @shawnkristoferu8303
      @shawnkristoferu8303 Před rokem

      @@esoekidjo
      Thank you but why is that the idiots that run the country did not figures it? I think people like David Cameron or Nigel Farage are on the take.

    • @michaelstimpson1137
      @michaelstimpson1137 Před rokem +4

      I lived in Croatia in the early 2000s, they needed to join the EU for much the same reasons, farmers weren't producing much because the county was being flooded with cheaper EU subsidised produce. Most of Croatias industry was decimated just before the Yugoslav civil war when the IMF forced them to sell off all nationalised industries in order to qualify for loans.
      The UK's biggest problem is that they think they have sovereignty over financial decisions and its clear now that like Yugoslavia 30 years ago, the banks and financial sector have a huge influence in what happens to the economy. Often the markets will not work in our favour.

    • @anaruizguti
      @anaruizguti Před rokem +1

      And this is why Germany has been attacked

    • @jamesandrew1750
      @jamesandrew1750 Před rokem +2

      1. England has very little manufacturing so manufacturing goods imported would be more expensive. How does leaving the EU impact on this? the cost of imported goods would go down for businesses if we reduced tariffs not up,
      2. There is inadequate farming in England to feed the English people. This is mostly due to the weather. You simply can’t grow oranges or pineapples in England. Since they will be imported they would be more expensive post Brexit. You seem to be making the assumption that anything imported would be more expensive, why?
      3. England’s financial services which is the biggest money maker to the country would suffer as London would no longer be the financial centre of Europe. It would be Frankfurt. This hasn't happened

  • @DB-cx4gm
    @DB-cx4gm Před rokem +55

    Guess we should’ve listened to the experts!?

    • @MarroniMusic
      @MarroniMusic Před rokem +3

      Hahaha, right... I guess it's time for your next instalment of myocarditis, I mean, 'booster'?

    • @militantcapitalist4606
      @militantcapitalist4606 Před rokem +7

      @@MarroniMusic 💩🤡

    • @MarroniMusic
      @MarroniMusic Před rokem

      @@militantcapitalist4606 Fantastic point. I'd never looked at it that way before!

    • @bongeyedbill9355
      @bongeyedbill9355 Před rokem

      Load of cwap!!

    • @chrismitchell4622
      @chrismitchell4622 Před rokem +3

      No we should make the X SPURTS work for a living

  • @viper_fan
    @viper_fan Před rokem +10

    Sovereign tea and happy fish.

  • @bim23885
    @bim23885 Před rokem +2

    But hey! we've got back 350 mil every week in NHS. NOT!

  • @walterrudich2175
    @walterrudich2175 Před rokem +2

    These must be the experts Brexiters refuse to listen.

  • @albertomatambo9441
    @albertomatambo9441 Před rokem +106

    Finally someone with the guts to tell Brexit damage has caused to the country. Got my respect.

    • @MarroniMusic
      @MarroniMusic Před rokem +1

      Guts? Respect? It's a very popular opinion. What these establishment cretins will never have the courage to do is accept the devastating and unnecessary effects of 'lockdown.'

    • @friendgray1
      @friendgray1 Před rokem +10

      The media is starting to admit it. It’s truly undeniable now

    • @andrewmelean8259
      @andrewmelean8259 Před rokem +5

      Much respect. Hopefully this is the tipping point

    • @fredfish4316
      @fredfish4316 Před rokem

      Finally? The pro-brexit crowd, whatever their motives, have been calling this project fear for years.

    • @terryb4547
      @terryb4547 Před rokem +5

      We don't want to know what he thinks ,the people decided out . If he doesn't like it he can join the dole queue.

  • @mintywebb
    @mintywebb Před rokem +27

    Inflation in the eurozone is similar to the UK, however the Eurozone is growing.

    • @SarahRileyMusic
      @SarahRileyMusic Před rokem

      The only thing the eurozone is growing in is illegal immigrants….

    • @themagpie_1
      @themagpie_1 Před rokem +1

      link for data please?

    • @anthonyferris8912
      @anthonyferris8912 Před rokem

      BERLIN (AP) - The German government's panel of independent economic advisers forecast that Europe's biggest economy will shrink by 0.2% next year.

    • @bambina5604
      @bambina5604 Před rokem

      @@anthonyferris8912 that's one country, silly

  • @michaelhussey440
    @michaelhussey440 Před rokem +2

    According to ONS the inflation rate in the Euro zone for October was 10.7% and for the UK it was just under 10 %. Membership of the EU apparently makes no difference to prices. The Labour politicians asking the questions here repeatedly try to get the BOE officials to rubbish Brexit but all they got was the recognition that the process of restoring our democracy and sovereignty has caused some disruption and uncertainty but this is to be expected , moreover the uncertainty was partly to do with the efforts of Remainers to overturn the vote and talk down the countrys prospects with dire predictions of catastrophe which has not transpired. There is also an attempt to pin the current spending cuts on Brexit and to minimise the effects of massive COVID borrowing and spending ( which really followed Labour economic doctrine ) and the war in Russia. It is worth pointing out that our worst period of austerity in recent decades began in 2010 when we were EU members.

    • @CHUTNEX
      @CHUTNEX Před rokem

      Cameron's austerity was a wholly political choice and nothing to do with being in the EU. The Tories had tripled the national debt before the costs of Covid were added.

  • @cloenka1340
    @cloenka1340 Před rokem +17

    Omg! Who could have predicted that 🤔

  • @sociolocomtsac
    @sociolocomtsac Před rokem +44

    Sad watching the UK burn, but it was inevitable. Hope it can recover eventually.

    • @cambs0181
      @cambs0181 Před rokem +3

      Once people work out that the politicians are not going to come over the hill to save them and that its up to them to sort this, then there may be hope.

    • @damianbutterworth2434
      @damianbutterworth2434 Před rokem +1

      Where I live you can pick what job you want to do. It`s good for human rights in the workplace. Wages have gone up. Overtime as you want it. It`s just the left crying because they will have to work soon. No more excuses.

    • @kimwit1307
      @kimwit1307 Před rokem

      @@damianbutterworth2434 "It`s good for human rights in the workplace." You do realize that the brexiteers want to do away with the ECHR and any worker rights derived from the EU, right?

    • @damianbutterworth2434
      @damianbutterworth2434 Před rokem +1

      @@kimwit1307 I have to smoke outside in the snow with vibration white finger. Not good but it`s the Eu`s laws. There are so many jobs about in the UK that you choose the best one and the other have to catch up with working conditions. Supply and demand. Who`s going to be nasty if they are short of staff?

    • @kimwit1307
      @kimwit1307 Před rokem +2

      @@damianbutterworth2434 I assure you that having to smoke outside has nothing to do with EU laws.
      "Who`s going to be nasty if they are short of staff?' You'd be surprised how they will start to cut corners. Give them a finger and they will take the arm.

  • @FraudVonSchitzypants
    @FraudVonSchitzypants Před rokem +16

    Here is an interesting fact.
    When a brexiteer dies he goes to brexit paradise.
    Once there he is welcomed by ayatollah Fahrage who gives him a blue passport, the keys to a country side mansion, a rolls Royce with a chauffer, seventy two virgins, a couple of unicorns (because you never know), and subscription to unlimited milk with some tea in it.

  • @claretblue2509
    @claretblue2509 Před rokem +4

    Failed to see where brexit was the problem and not the government

    • @WiredCountDuckula
      @WiredCountDuckula Před rokem

      Doesn’t matter what government have Brexit can never benefit U.K.

  • @kanedNunable
    @kanedNunable Před rokem +52

    do not forget, they got rid of carney because he said it was madness. and this guy was ok to go along with it for a bit earning 500k a year.

    • @footballmint
      @footballmint Před rokem +5

      The bank doesn't decide whether or not to "go along with it", that's a gov policy decision. The bank can just say what they think the effects will be, which they did.

    • @anthonycraig274
      @anthonycraig274 Před rokem +2

      Why do you think £500K is a lot of money? He earns more than that a week in investments. Mark Carney told everyone Brexit is self inflicted economic harm, they told him to be quite.

  • @Binnziboy
    @Binnziboy Před rokem +30

    As Farage said "We got our country back" Yep we sure did!

  • @timwoodger7896
    @timwoodger7896 Před rokem +50

    I agree with all of it apart from Brexit is why we have austerity! Austerity is a political choice favoured by the Tories so they can distribute wealth to the rich! It’s never worked to help the economy in anyway possible!

    • @TheHead9999
      @TheHead9999 Před rokem

      One thing I have learned is not to trust politicians, Bankers, pharma, arms industry, civil service. If we had taken the opportunity to use our independence to run our own country instead of allowing a globalist establishment to conduct a long planned coup. The virus exposed our media, political cabal and the medical services for what they are. Don't blame Brexit for the activities of an administration that needs purging, pruning and punishing..

    • @jamesandrew1750
      @jamesandrew1750 Před rokem

      Austerity is a term used to describe a reduction in state spending, how is that re-distributing wealth? right now we have a crisis caused by state spending, ie. the opposite of 'austerity', the 2.4 trillion state debt currently accounts for 120 billion in interest payments a year, as the base interest rate increases this figure keeps rising which means we cant increase interest rates to keep inflation down without bankrupting the state, so of course 'austerity would have helped the economy. I say would have because there has never been a reduction in state spending nor a reduction in the NHS budget despite people constantly talking about 'austerity'

    • @TheHead9999
      @TheHead9999 Před rokem +2

      @@jamesandrew1750 The state spending was the redistribution of wealth. This is the fallout.

    • @jonathanodude6660
      @jonathanodude6660 Před rokem

      @@jamesandrew1750 interest payments made to the bank that printed the money, which is a state owned entity... austerity doesnt improve the fiscal position of a state, it just reduces the material quality of it. if the interest payments are manageable, they can extend into perpetuity with no repercussions. austerity is never required, apart from if the debt is not servicable. the kamikwazi budget was *more* debt. you dont do that if you cant service existing debt, because then you go bankrupt like sri lanka. austerity was not required, nowhere else in the world is insane enough to do it in a crisis either. more state spending and paying the debt off in better times is the correct choice.

    • @anthonycraig274
      @anthonycraig274 Před rokem +1

      It’s kind of like this, Brexit made the situation worse. If you can argue otherwise I would love to hear it. With the caveat you have to give example in reality.

  • @albu318
    @albu318 Před rokem +22

    Well done chaps. Big thanks. Shall we vote either on everything else that requires some level of knowledge? I guess we don't need any space exploration since Grimsby hasn't been discovered fully of its potential yet...? Let's vote.

    • @tooshlong
      @tooshlong Před rokem +4

      I love how you have to pretend that Britain is unique with these economic issues in order to feel as though you were right all along. Its all fantasy vibes. You live in a fantasy world and project it onto others. Amazing.

  • @nickclarkuk
    @nickclarkuk Před rokem +7

    Aren’t these the people Michael Gove says we’ve had enough of ? Fingers in ears lalalalal

  • @seekingenlightenment9685

    So many people that supported Brexit say that the promises (which have not materialised) were not promises, just hopeful predictions !
    So on that basis Brexit has been a success. And in return, the UK is the first country to place financial sanctions on itself by turning its back on its closest and biggest business partner, and made freedom of movement more difficult for its own citizens. You couldn't make it up.

    • @rhythmstic
      @rhythmstic Před rokem

      Well you seem to be doing a good job at making it up.
      The growth figures for 2022 will show the UK outperforming all but one of the EU countries.
      Moreover, an EU pig processor just announced they're opening a processing factory in the UK bringing 30,000 job opportunities for the N E of England. 🤣

    • @seekingenlightenment9685
      @seekingenlightenment9685 Před rokem

      @@rhythmstic wise words.
      Remind me, how far can I walk in a straight line before falling off the edge of the world ?

    • @rhythmstic
      @rhythmstic Před rokem

      @@seekingenlightenment9685 yah I'm full of wisdom whereas you seem to be full of something else ..

    • @seekingenlightenment9685
      @seekingenlightenment9685 Před rokem

      @@rhythmstic Let's hope there isn't a Zombie apocalypse. Actually you wouldn't need to worry as Zombies eat brains, so you should be completely safe.

  • @mahe-2268
    @mahe-2268 Před rokem +1

    Since 2017, 5 years later, OxBridge PPE graduates START to realise. SERIOUSLY❓

  • @ruthe6017
    @ruthe6017 Před rokem +1

    I voted remain, and I think Brexit made a dent, but by far the biggest factor in the UK current problems are this governments incompetence and corruption. They are not working in the best interests of this country.

  • @MrJenklns
    @MrJenklns Před rokem +4

    UK Gdp has taken a hit !

  • @datofficial6062
    @datofficial6062 Před rokem +3

    Brexit mean Brexit!

  • @marcushampton2075
    @marcushampton2075 Před 8 měsíci

    I love how polite everyone is about such an unmitigated disaster.

  • @derekbrown7892
    @derekbrown7892 Před rokem +2

    Brexit has been a disaster no trade deal came as promised with USA ,it’s much easier to deal across the channel,we are alone ! We are better in a group

    • @joycegibbs5267
      @joycegibbs5267 Před rokem

      we would have had one with Trump as he is friend of the UK, Biden hates us though. It hasn't been great but we had the pandemic which certainly has been a disaster, you can't blame that on Brexit, although most remainers ignore that.

  • @Patricia-sv8zb
    @Patricia-sv8zb Před rokem +5

    Finally!

  • @HelenaMikas
    @HelenaMikas Před rokem +23

    "No man is an island "The mentality of too many in the UK believes in a superiority that doesn't exist .It never has.
    Those who follow propaganda think otherwise .Sadly others will suffer .

    • @glynarchie5765
      @glynarchie5765 Před rokem +4

      I think the same thing , this English ,more so than British mentality we have , we are superior to other countries, they need us, more than we need them , just isn't true, I have news to other English people this isn't the best country in the world, not the worst, but not the best , and slipping further down now , due to brexit.

    • @lorenzomagazzeni5425
      @lorenzomagazzeni5425 Před rokem +3

      This thing started a long time ago. Normal humans have limited memories and the attention span of a gnat. Suffice to say that until the 60s the UK was the No. 1 producer of cars in Europe and serious motorcycles. OK, OK, it was the fault of the workers who wanted to have the tea break. Ciao

    • @martinhambleton5076
      @martinhambleton5076 Před rokem +2

      Why are you accusing a whole nation of having, a superiority complex?
      What are you basing this on precisely?

    • @Mute040404
      @Mute040404 Před rokem +1

      @@glynarchie5765 What is the best country?

  • @darrylsimpson4744
    @darrylsimpson4744 Před rokem +1

    @Justsomeguy .. I totally agree with you.

  • @keirancrawley9905
    @keirancrawley9905 Před rokem +1

    It's the politics that's doing the country over not brexit

  • @pcread
    @pcread Před rokem +21

    anyone that voted "leave" should be made to watch this with their eyes wired open like in A Clockwork Orange

    • @o0xTHEcoPlayerx0o
      @o0xTHEcoPlayerx0o Před rokem +2

      you know the guy saying that sits on a cushy 500k a year wage.
      he's also the same guy thats telling the common people to not ask for pay rises equal to inflation....
      ...while he's earning 500k a year.. the prime minister doesnt earn that... plenty of footballers dont earn that.
      do you still trust the integrity of what he's saying? or does that cast even the lightest of a shadow of a doubt for you?

    • @michaelball1307
      @michaelball1307 Před rokem +2

      🇬🇧👍🏻 I'm glad I voted to leave.. ✌🏻🇬🇧

    • @Glasstable2011
      @Glasstable2011 Před rokem +4

      @@o0xTHEcoPlayerx0o do you believe the amount a person earns is related to the truth or their statements?

    • @damianbutterworth2434
      @damianbutterworth2434 Před rokem

      I would but I`m too busy at work forging massive crankshafts for the USA and Europe. Plenty of work if you want a job.

    • @o0xTHEcoPlayerx0o
      @o0xTHEcoPlayerx0o Před rokem

      @@Glasstable2011 i dont think its imperative, but it certainly raises an eyebrow under these settings.
      do you think evaluating the integrity of someones character irrelevant on forming an opinion of the value of what they are saying?

  • @readmylisp
    @readmylisp Před rokem +1

    When the public vote for something that the Government has no intention of honouring ...result = a total dog's bollocks.

  • @grimreaper8220
    @grimreaper8220 Před rokem +1

    What a complete load of bollocks the fact that we shouldn't pay the bills for the EU makes us better off and that's just for starters.

  • @creativity2598
    @creativity2598 Před rokem +10

    Looks like video is in repeat but I am glad it should be said and told repeatedly

  • @markedwardsuk
    @markedwardsuk Před rokem +5

    Poor Andrew Bailey, who supported Brexit. The government had mechanisms to tackle inflation at source, but decided to throw the hot potato to the Bank of England and let poor old Bailey to sort out with interest rates, and then he has to run the gauntlet at a committee meeting, I bet he's happy.

  • @AJ-iu6nw
    @AJ-iu6nw Před rokem +2

    all these guys are crooks

  • @LegionIscariot
    @LegionIscariot Před rokem +7

    The guy in the back seat to right is really groping that pen 🖊️

  • @markshirley01
    @markshirley01 Před rokem +23

    Half our country will simply not believe brexit is causing a problem. It's near impossible to get brexit support to understand the damage that's being done.

    • @blitzmom2674
      @blitzmom2674 Před rokem +1

      half the country don't want to be serfs in the EU/WEF totalitarian state. Of course, the UK, under charles and the Great Reset, are doing their best to bring that about in the UK, brexit or not. But at least some people stood up.

    • @artiefakt4402
      @artiefakt4402 Před rokem +4

      @@blitzmom2674 What about the Illuminati ?

    • @blitzmom2674
      @blitzmom2674 Před rokem +1

      @@artiefakt4402 when they give speeches pushing the Great Reset, then talk about them. Otherwise, pay attention to what is going on at G20.

    • @gsugesuio
      @gsugesuio Před rokem +9

      ​@@blitzmom2674 Everything you say about the UK and EU also applies to Scotland / NI and UK. Brexit will eventually split and destroy the UK, but hey you regained your "sovereignty", whatever that means to you.

    • @blitzmom2674
      @blitzmom2674 Před rokem

      @@gsugesuio less government is always better than more. And the EU might have been one thing when it was just about trade, though it wasn't so good for many UK people, but it went on to become a totalitarian state, didn't it?

  • @hadge209
    @hadge209 Před rokem +1

    the government really didnt want brexit so have not implemented it as well as they could ,there has been politicians and civil servants throwing spanners in the works ,whether you wanted it or not if every one pulled in one direction it might sort the debacle out

    • @xaiano794
      @xaiano794 Před rokem

      What could they possibly change to magically make brexit a success?
      The facts speak for themselves, total goods exports are down 15% since brexit and they haven't fallen in every other major developed economy.
      The OBR has a concise paper on this
      With so much money lost thanks to brexit, there is nothing to make anything successful with

  • @stephenhodgson3506
    @stephenhodgson3506 Před měsícem

    At the end of 2015 the head of risk assessment at Lloyds of London gave a speech in which he was virtually bang on in what the outcome of a vote to leave the EU would mean. His job and his departments is to forecast what the liability risks will be for their underwriters and they have been very successful in what they d for a couple of centuries. But he was one of those pesky experts that shouldn't be listened to according to Gove and others because they undermined their case.

  • @robertcranston7427
    @robertcranston7427 Před rokem +15

    So it wasn't bailing out the banks, the numerous QE programs and then a massive furlough program and ignoring how susceptible we are to the energy markets. It was all down to Brexit.

    • @stephenmcaleese8104
      @stephenmcaleese8104 Před rokem +4

      Yip.

    • @chazbazza
      @chazbazza Před rokem +6

      There were 10 years of austerity then after Brexit the 3 square miles of London where most of this country’s profit is generated stopped being as profitable

    • @cobbler40
      @cobbler40 Před rokem +6

      Loss of £100 billion in exports to the EU and resulting damage to British companies ?

    • @cobbler40
      @cobbler40 Před rokem

      Nobody has said was caused the black hole ?

    • @SarahRileyMusic
      @SarahRileyMusic Před rokem +2

      Haha! Yes exactly!!! Blaming BREXIT is for this who don’t understand basic economics, or how the financial
      World works….

  • @clivewalker5465
    @clivewalker5465 Před rokem +5

    Did he happen to mention the cost to the Country [ Taxpayers ] of the Banking Crash ?

    • @rorynell4962
      @rorynell4962 Před rokem +3

      Which was not Bailey’s fault in any way.

  • @Lee_303
    @Lee_303 Před rokem +2

    So the Tories can use brexit as a shield!?

  • @joecater894
    @joecater894 Před rokem

    she talks about depreciation.... so she is saying a marked change in EURGBP with an increase in that radio (outlined by charts) .... ok, open EURGBP , flick to monthly timeframe... you will see that drawing lines around average extents of the chart between say... 2009 and now... minus the huge drop which left the pound to euro unnaturally high... the EURGBP is actually well within its usual trading zone on average.... and that the place the pound dropped from pre brexit was actually the exception. Sure..... there was a large reaction... but this hasn't taken the exchange rate anywhere out of the ordinary...
    Lets put it another way... the EURGBP pair between 2006 and 2008 was 3000 pips change in value ; after brexit to now it is 1683 pips

  • @creativity2598
    @creativity2598 Před rokem +23

    Thanks very much for this video. We need more of these videos in the "free world"

    • @seanpruitt6801
      @seanpruitt6801 Před rokem

      The fact you have the audacity to put “” is really ironic considering you are in fact watching a free and open video in a free and open country lol

  • @jailbreak852
    @jailbreak852 Před rokem +3

    Hard to sever these ties. I also think things have to change in England to keep the British Isles intact. It's a big change for England, but at some point they should look at that. That means letting go of the monarchy and the north of Ireland as part of England. I'm sure I won't see it in my lifetime, but I hope they stick together as a trade bloc. The monarchy is token anyway

    • @th8257
      @th8257 Před rokem +1

      Letting go as north of Ireland as part of England??? Northern Ireland has never been part of England. That's why it's called Northern Ireland. When you say England, do you mean the UK?

    • @joycegibbs5267
      @joycegibbs5267 Před rokem

      I would have said that, but looking at what is going on in Iran, I'm not so sure. It will happen though and faster than you think.

  • @BLUESKY-zt1nv
    @BLUESKY-zt1nv Před rokem +2

    What if the eastern idea ate the sensitive?

  • @jimmorrison4291
    @jimmorrison4291 Před rokem +1

    But who cares what the most qualified, independent experts have to say? I'm more interested what a government minister, whose career is dependent on Brexit being seen as a success, has to say.

    • @xaiano794
      @xaiano794 Před rokem

      The facts speak for themselves, total goods exports are down 15% since brexit and they haven't fallen in every other major developed economy.
      The OBR has a concise paper on this

  • @michaelstimpson1137
    @michaelstimpson1137 Před rokem +10

    In my view the main problem is how money is created as debt and the need for constant growth to mitigate the interest on new money. The other issue that no one talks about anymore is that literally trillions are being funnelled through the city of London and into offshore accounts tax free, all of this is money that's been created through debt and has interest chargeable somewhere to someone. This money is being taken out of the economy and is therefore a burden on nations where it was created which compounds the problem with FIAT monetary systems. Brexit was all about the UK wanting to avoid scrutiny of its offshore tax havens, Dave has several millions squirreled away there himself. It would bring down the city when it transpires the UK is holding money belonging to drug barons, terrorists and international crime syndicates.
    The irony is that politicians will talk about paying off debt, when debt gets paid off, the money no longer exists, so paying down debt takes money out of the economy and so there's a contraction in the money supply.
    The UK has arguably been in a deep depression since 2008 and it has only been due to corporate buy backs the real estate bubble and the new money that it creates that we've had any kind of growth.

    • @teniente_snafu
      @teniente_snafu Před rokem

      Money creation can not only happen by making new things. It works perfectly well with making existing things better too. If you take out a loan to insulate your house, the value reflected in the money created on the loan is your improved house and your lower energy bills.

  • @alasdairblack393
    @alasdairblack393 Před rokem +9

    As a Brit living in Canada I have been appalled by this act of lasting self harm. The country is stuffed thanks to Farage and Co. and their misinformation. BTW Canadian inflation is 6.9%.

    • @tooshlong
      @tooshlong Před rokem

      7% inflation?! Oh wow. Canada playing a blinder with completely normal inflation then... When 9% is up against 7% it's honestly nothing to crow about lad.

    • @anthonycraig274
      @anthonycraig274 Před rokem

      @@tooshlong 😂 the U.K. inflation rate is 11.1%

    • @williamroberts7919
      @williamroberts7919 Před rokem

      Yeh wanker treadu is in office enjoy your cucking liberal.

  • @valentindanev1703
    @valentindanev1703 Před rokem +1

    In my opinion Brexit was never meant to bring economical benefits. It was action taken to save the UK`s honor. Similar to the samurai, UK committed economical Seppuku. The people that wanted Brexit never cared about what will happen to the economy and how the working classes will deal with it. Well i hope it works out for UK, but as a European i do not quite understand why this desigeon was taken.

  • @anthonygee6568
    @anthonygee6568 Před rokem

    The problem is that the political classes did not deliver Brexit.

    • @xaiano794
      @xaiano794 Před rokem

      Probably because what you imagined brexit did was not reality.
      I mean literally what could possibly be done different to magically make it a success?

  • @stephenrobinson3681
    @stephenrobinson3681 Před rokem +3

    Has anyone mentioned that Andrew Bailey was not neutral on BREXIT, he was a BREXITEER! It's time people started highlighting the failures of BREXIT: isn't it Mr Starmer.

  • @richardsimms251
    @richardsimms251 Před rokem +36

    I think that Brexit was beyond what the average voter could really understand. It’s benefits and disadvantages were not clearly presented to the public who were blindsided by emotion and hot air. How many more years will it take to consistently convince a large portion of the British public what an honest but disastrous mistake it was ? RS.

    • @freespeechforever
      @freespeechforever Před rokem +1

      richard simms: average person! Don't make me laugh! Get back under your stone

    • @doreenhollywood7459
      @doreenhollywood7459 Před rokem +2

      Most of Scotland and N Ireland understood the consequences so why didn't the people in england? Conservative voters should be ashamed

    • @calsitup
      @calsitup Před rokem +1

      Very true, both the Independence and EU referendums were instigated by narrow nationalism with no real thought of what it meant or the consequences.

    • @markwinter54
      @markwinter54 Před rokem +3

      @@doreenhollywood7459 Not just Tory voters ....What about those Labour voters in the West Mids, Yorkshire (South & West) and the North East, they have to take there fair share of the blame ...

    • @williamroberts7919
      @williamroberts7919 Před rokem +1

      @@doreenhollywood7459 And wales

  • @joemdee
    @joemdee Před rokem +1

    Productivity has sweet f a to do with BREXIT.
    The economy can and will recover. Blame the EU on the additional cost of paperwork.🎉
    Brexit was about sovereignty not just about the economy.

  • @markaxworthy2508
    @markaxworthy2508 Před rokem +1

    "Destroyed"? Great headline, but it is not exactly "what the senior figures in the Bank of England outline in the Treasury Committee." said, is it? "Decimated"? At no point did they offer any figures even close to 10%. Why not let the evidence speak for itself, instead of engaging in wish-fulfilment exaggerations?

    • @markaxworthy2508
      @markaxworthy2508 Před rokem

      Let's talk? Start by matching the headlines and text to the actual content. If you don't, it discredits your message. Exaggerations are a hostage to fortune exploitable by opponents and don't help persuade those of us more undecided.

  • @malcolmcuthbertson3359
    @malcolmcuthbertson3359 Před rokem +5

    I studied economics and one of the first things I learnt was a quote " If we do this it could result in massive growth or it could result in massive decline" , nothing exists in a vacuum . There are multiple causes to every economic event . Right now we have a bunch of Tory remainers in charge so the narrative has changed to " Brexit bad " , one could consider the effects of an international global downturn , America was not affected by Brexit but has still experienced a downturn , maybe we could have a look at what the two nations have in common instead of what they have different .
    1) A government reluctant to enforce it borders , while still having a social welfare net for all people within it borders . Costing massive amounts of money to house , feed and pay foreigners to live within our borders while not working or paying taxes
    2) World events with gas and oil prices , our economy is based on gas and oil , just think Petro-dollar and the proxy war with Russia over Ukraine
    3) Both nations have crippled their own economy by shipping all of its production overseas to places where the labour is cheaper or even slave labour
    4) Both nations subscribe to prohibitive green policies on energy production , allowing no new energy resource collection within their own country instead paying for it from foreign powers , who by the way don't care about green agendas and will happily get the resources out through the financially cheapest method available polluting the same world , green agendas are trying to save, even more . Basically energy is the new financial stability and we are shipping ours to foreign powers who don't like us .
    5) We locked down our country and paid people to stay at home and produce nothing , causing massive inflation the likes that our children and grandchildren will still feel the effects of
    6) We weakened our international power with bad policy thinking that if we are the "good guy" people will like us and we will feel better about ourselves . Our competitors have no such morals and are quite happy to see us shoot ourselves in the foot . Our ancestors understood something we have forgotten , their are no friends in international relations only convenient alliances of the moment , as has been proven by the EU now we are no longer "friends"
    7) We fund a war that may prove to be too expensive for us to "win" that way , Ukraine has received loans from both countries so far in excess of its yearly GDP that it will never even be able to make the interest repayments .
    8) We send financial assistance to nations that hate us , and we do so badly so that the corruption in those countries makes sure the peoples opinion of us never changes . So we impoverish our own people to send money to our enemies calling it reparations
    And so many more causes to effect "its the economy , stupid"
    Now ask yourself the question , what would still being part of the EU have changed about any of these ? If anything it would have made some of them even more of a problem .

    • @mindfuldrone
      @mindfuldrone Před rokem

      "Tory remainers in charge"? Does your head butto up the back, pal?

    • @joycegibbs5267
      @joycegibbs5267 Před rokem

      thank you Sir.

    • @johngodley256
      @johngodley256 Před rokem +4

      I do not know where you got your ideas of ecomomics, but getting rid of a great amount of your work force
      and at the same time making it harder to sell the goods you produce, is not a good move. Brexit has damaged
      the UK economy to an extent which is unparalleled. That is not economics, just plain common sense.

    • @michaelstimpson1137
      @michaelstimpson1137 Před rokem +2

      Oh dear. Are you sure that economics course wasn't in the daily express?
      In my view the main problem is how money is created as debt and the need for constant growth to mitigate the interest on new money. This system is what is causing some of the issues above (although some of them made I larf, particularly the one about international aid). The other issue is that literally trillions are being funnelled through the city of London and into offshore accounts tax free, all of this is money that's been created through debt and has interest chargeable somewhere to someone. This money is being taken out of the economy and is therefore a burden on nations where it was created which compounds the problem with FIAT monetary systems.
      The irony is that politicians will talk about paying off debt, when debt gets paid off, the money no longer exists, so paying down debt takes money out of the economy and so there's a contraction in the money supply.
      The UK has arguably been in a deep depression since 2008 and it has only been due to corporate buy backs the real estate bubble and the new money that it creates that we've had any kind of growth.

    • @danielcrafter9349
      @danielcrafter9349 Před rokem +1

      You very clearly did NOT study economics
      Especially when you somehow think you know better than the experts doing the economist jobs in the video...

  • @airdog1829
    @airdog1829 Před rokem +20

    The bigger the UK population, the less each of us would have paid to The EU (c.£120 per capita in 2016). I do worry about maths skills in this country.

    • @markmoran916
      @markmoran916 Před rokem

      Unfortunately a combination of epic ignorance and stupidity, a very poorly educated population and blatant exceptionalism mixed with lots of racism caused this shite fest 🙄

    • @kanedNunable
      @kanedNunable Před rokem

      @@Buckets1000 they count it as being given as they spunked billions on tory donors for things like track and trace and PPE.

    • @amateurcameraman
      @amateurcameraman Před rokem +2

      The bigger the population (rising by the MILLION every 5 years or so!), means a massive drop of GDP per person measured over the whole economy. Not to mention the extraordinary coats needed to upgrade and create the public service infrastructure to deal with such population growth... Or indeed, the significant reduction in the quality of those public services in the meantime. Why are these things never included in the cost/'benefit' calculations honestly??

    • @joycegibbs5267
      @joycegibbs5267 Před rokem

      @Jack Smith so what?

    • @williamroberts7919
      @williamroberts7919 Před rokem

      @Jack Smith Enjoy your covid lockdowns

  • @dedesmith613
    @dedesmith613 Před rokem

    A land owner knows when to cut lumber when to plant wheat when to raise cattle and when to make milk then when to plant trees again all on one piece of land there are no shortages except that of human brains.

  • @lenrman969
    @lenrman969 Před rokem

    Brexit has been a terrific boost to Ireland.
    Ireland and Malta are now the only English-speaking countries in the EU.
    Some city banks opened Dublin offices.
    Ireland reported a government surplus of €2.5 billion for each of the last 3 quarters.
    It has been able to dip into this surplus to help people with the rise in the cost of living.
    Boris never set up tariff infrastructure so Ireland and EU can export tariff-free into the UK.
    UK farmers found out this week that the Australia deal has the potential to ruin them.
    (like the fishermen found out last year).
    The Paris stock market overtook London this week.
    Meanwhile, the UK population is facing the biggest drop in living standards since the 1950s.
    Watch what happened since Brexit in this vid. Skip to 3:20 to see the last 10 years performance. czcams.com/video/G7eatb8oNGE/video.html

  • @k.a6880
    @k.a6880 Před rokem +15

    Bank of England has opened up the treasury for Ukraine and can the Governor say something about it??

    • @gedog77
      @gedog77 Před rokem +1

      Open… actually they’re pretty modest contributions. The latest is only £50m. And we’re paying into a war we allowed to start and one we can’t afford to lose. Values have value when they’re fought for. Democracy and capitalism underpin our economy. Russia actively seeks to undermine all of that and allowing it to do so would weaken all aspects of our economy, further fuel blackmail and pressure on food supply as well as clearly messaging to China that they too can bully us.

    • @mp3hipnozy
      @mp3hipnozy Před rokem

      Bank of England belongs to globalist not English.

    • @donaldstewart9827
      @donaldstewart9827 Před rokem +1

      If they didn't you will be speaking Russian this time next year.

    • @mp3hipnozy
      @mp3hipnozy Před rokem

      @@donaldstewart9827 Lol:)

  • @rtalbot87
    @rtalbot87 Před rokem +4

    Well Done David Cameron. Blaise.

  • @captainbuggernut9565
    @captainbuggernut9565 Před rokem +1

    Sorry I watched this expecting an explanation of how brexit has destroyed the UK economy and I didn't see one. Maybe you posted the wrong video? What I did hear was how the actual referendum affected the markets, how the indecision inflicted on us by those who wouldn't accept the vote damaged our economy and how that loss of investment has affected growth today. As for the TCA yes tons more paperwork will affect business today. You can thank the EU for that. They do the same to every country in the world. I'm still waiting for that brexit cliff which turned out to be 4ft high, it would seem.

  • @billsnodgrass5942
    @billsnodgrass5942 Před rokem

    Anyone remember the Rowan Atkinson sketch from the 1980s where he played the Devil welcoming the recently damned to Hell? Well Rowan would do well to freshen it up a bit. Let's add the European Research Group and, oh go on then, anyone who voted for Brexit! Not forgetting the famous line: "I bet you're feeling a right bunch of nitwits now!"

  • @dogwithwigwamz.7320
    @dogwithwigwamz.7320 Před rokem +37

    The biggest mistake Brexiters made was to think the world would either not notice that we had left the European Union ( thus we, as an independent nation, would maintain some leverage - not likely ), or that it would not take advantage of us having left the European Union ( far more unlikely ).

    • @iot-portal4806
      @iot-portal4806 Před rokem

      The biggest mistake was leaving the EU. There is nothing good about any part of it.

    • @paulgibbons2320
      @paulgibbons2320 Před rokem +3

      All we can do is open the door for them.
      The dead wood in parliament have to walk through it.
      At the end of the day it all falls down to the calibre of our leadership.

    • @maritaschweizer1117
      @maritaschweizer1117 Před rokem +7

      One of the main reason for founding the EU was the bigger leverage of the Union in comparison to a single small country. Now the power in the EU is shifting more East and it is a pity that GB cannot contribute to the change within the EU.

    • @stephens2984
      @stephens2984 Před rokem +7

      @@maritaschweizer1117 the biggest problem while we were in the eu was that we in it economically but not politically as our small minded politicians of all parties would do everything to fight for their own selfish agendas and not for the good of the people and europe as a whole.

    • @tooshlong
      @tooshlong Před rokem

      The biggest mistake Obsessive Remainers make is continuing to think Britain is still centre of the world and that leaving the EU would cause economic havoc and runaway inflation across the continent. Very odd.

  • @friendgray1
    @friendgray1 Před rokem +13

    I followed the Brexit run up very closely, and I think it’s important to remember two things:
    1. Most British people had no strong opinions on the EU before the Brexit campaign.
    2. The primary argument for Brexit before the ref was always economic, and talking about “sovereignty” (which we always had) only came when financial arguments were disproven. People mostly talked about it AFTER the vote

    • @bongeyedbill9355
      @bongeyedbill9355 Před rokem +1

      Don't talk out your Ringo fella.
      The majority of folk that follow politics, knew exactly how they were going to vote, well before the referendum was announced!
      Top of the bill was mass migration, mostly from the EU and it's shenghen open borders policy.
      Secondly. We don't want to be dictated to by the uncountable brussels elite, that we can not vote out.
      Brexit was a once in a lifetime binding vote.
      The vote was either leave the EU and all its instutuions. Or stay part of the club in its entirety.
      The majority voted to leave.
      So don't insult me, or your own intelligence. By trying to quote what reasons I had, or anyone else's reasons for that matter, to vote for brexit.
      That's what democracy is all about kidda.
      Even if you don't agree with a result. that goes against your own passionate beliefs. on any matter.
      Brexit could have been a roaring success if the country from day one, had we all got behind the referendum result and maximised the new opportunities that Brexit Britain had created for itself.
      But, that was not to be. You lot sicken me and make me ashamed of politics on a whole.
      That goes for every democracy hating MP or lord that has done their damdest to overthrow a binding referendum result.

    • @friendgray1
      @friendgray1 Před rokem

      @@bongeyedbill9355 gaslighting

    • @bongeyedbill9355
      @bongeyedbill9355 Před rokem

      @@friendgray1 and that's your your intelligent comeback is it?
      ...and you lot think brexit voters are thick as two short ones lol.

    • @friendgray1
      @friendgray1 Před rokem

      Why would I spend expend time and effort arguing against someone who’s being disingenuous?

  • @nakedtraitor1802
    @nakedtraitor1802 Před rokem

    From the WTO website (03/10/2022): World trade is expected to lose momentum in the second half of 2022 and remain subdued in 2023 as multiple shocks weigh on the global economy. WTO economists now predict global merchandise trade volumes will grow by 3.5% in 2022-slightly better than the 3.0% forecast in April. For 2023, however, they foresee a 1.0% increase-down sharply from the previous estimate of 3.4%.
    Is this down to Brexit as well?

  • @DoubleOSeven007
    @DoubleOSeven007 Před 7 měsíci

    The UK housing market is no longer under stress, due to lack of housing for cheap foreigh labour. Advertise a flat in Rep of Ireland and 100 people turn up to view it, few of them are Irish. Only the strongest businesses will survice, which forms an excellent foundation for the future. You can't keep relying on cheap foreign labour. The points system for imigration prevents the far eastern pouplous coming to Britain and whilst most want to work and send their money home, there was an increase in crime from Eastern European gangsters, that's all but stopped now. There are some advantages, just for a blanaced argument. I believe in Labours 2nd term, circa 2030 they'll be an option to re-join, but not before.

  • @smooman792
    @smooman792 Před rokem +4

    And there was me thinking the state of the economy all started with the banks being greedy, but no it was Brexit.

    • @th8257
      @th8257 Před rokem +4

      The banking crisis could and should have been got over much more quickly as it was in other countries. The situation was exacerbated by austerity and then made much worse by Brexit. With regard to Brexit, as someone said, "we shot ourselves in the foot and then amputated the wrong leg"

    • @hurri7720
      @hurri7720 Před rokem

      Two bad things can happen at about the same time.

  • @dnickaroo3574
    @dnickaroo3574 Před rokem +6

    They do not stand a chance against Farage - he knows what motivates people.

    • @aidanmaguire8712
      @aidanmaguire8712 Před rokem

      Yes hate for immigrants is was down to and no consideration for the economic consequences of leaving the larges market on the planet 29 miles away

    • @hurri7720
      @hurri7720 Před rokem

      Yes he is a superb snake oil salesman. But you should be very worried about the fact that he is so successful in Britain (or was successful).
      Socrates warned us about people like him among ill educated people.
      Something to think about here:
      czcams.com/video/fLJBzhcSWTk/video.html
      I hope you can spot the sweet shop owner.

  • @16brooking10
    @16brooking10 Před rokem +16

    Don't listen to the people who know what has happened, listen to frog face farage and the Mail well done brexteers. You got what you wanted so now don't complain when you don't have a pot to p in

    • @markwinter54
      @markwinter54 Před rokem +2

      'Frog faced Farage' ...Don't be so disparaging to the future PM of the UK.....

    • @michaelball1307
      @michaelball1307 Před rokem +1

      Up sticks and leave...🇬🇧✌🏻 you'll feel much better over abroad...👍🏻🇬🇧 👋🏻 see you..

    • @grassytramtracks
      @grassytramtracks Před rokem +2

      @@michaelball1307 that's not how it works. You don't leave just because you dislike the political situation - this is a democracy. I could have equally applied the same logic to you when we were in the EU in the opposite direction!

    • @martinreed1401
      @martinreed1401 Před rokem

      @@markwinter54 You are obviously very mentally ill. Or a Daily Mail reader. Actually they are the same thing

    • @markwinter54
      @markwinter54 Před rokem

      @@martinreed1401 I take it you've never heard of sarcasm.!!!!....As for the Daily Mail, I'd buy it to line our cats litter tray that's about it ...

  • @michaels8638
    @michaels8638 Před rokem

    Watching politics you begin to see just how limited they are within their discussions and how naive they are to the whole story of economic events. Due to the fact that the UK always kept the £ in or out of the eurozone, the Brexit effect is only part of the reason the £ has been devalued, its by how much ? Probably 50% of the devaluation against the Euro would have happened anyway as the UK manufacturing base add our unemployment level is somewhere between 40-50%per capita of that of the euro zone so of the 6% , 2-3% would have happened even if we stayed in the EU. Now then we have the Truss factor, what would have never happened if it were not for Truss is the 15% wipe off we saw within days of her policy budget and the 9% since reversing we have clawed back after she left office. This was a cost on imports for about 1 month which is solely due to her budget.

  • @1life_Only
    @1life_Only Před rokem +1

    Yet the political party that led to this exciting predicament is still on power playing “oh prime minister”

  • @LaggardInLove
    @LaggardInLove Před rokem +13

    This is what happens when you have no real talent apart from plundering and looting.

    • @oralogarro9932
      @oralogarro9932 Před rokem +1

      Amen love from the Caribbean ♥️♥️♥️♥️🙏🙏

    • @cambs0181
      @cambs0181 Před rokem +3

      Wow a hit at an empire which died almost 100 years ago and nobody alive today can remember, including yourself. That has no relevance today. Change the record!

    • @damadefeso
      @damadefeso Před rokem

      @cambs 01 lol it doesn’t need to exist as the effects of it are still felt in society till this today.
      Example, do you know how long promissory notes (aka fiat money) have been the main source of legal tender?
      Well, that terrible decision is what culminated in the collapse of many an economy and a massive reason why we are where we’re at today. An inevitable depression.
      But you’ll probably disagree nonetheless as privilege is invisible to those that benefit from it.

    • @jamespower2984
      @jamespower2984 Před rokem

      ​@@cambs0181 you need to check when the empire ended, Not that long ago at all.

  • @oralogarro9932
    @oralogarro9932 Před rokem +6

    Just got back from Holland and the airport is a nightmare lines go on and on and on,before Brexit u walk though,and this is also in Spain France and Germany and Ireland. And this is after Brexit.

    • @jailbreak852
      @jailbreak852 Před rokem +2

      That was to be expected, I guess. The UK is so slow to react to anything, they make the EU look swift. Meanwhile, they've done nothing significant with bilateral trade. It was probably unwise as a lark.

    • @kimwit1307
      @kimwit1307 Před rokem +2

      That has nothing to do with brexit.

    • @joycegibbs5267
      @joycegibbs5267 Před rokem +1

      I think you mean, after Covid.

    • @o0xTHEcoPlayerx0o
      @o0xTHEcoPlayerx0o Před rokem

      @@jailbreak852 wasnt the EU warned in 2014 after the annexation of crimea to get off of russian gas?
      and again in 2016... in hubris they laughed and mocked the people who gave the warnings....
      now 8 years after the first warning.. very swift my friend, they are very swift.

  • @leonardgibney2997
    @leonardgibney2997 Před rokem

    What l as a Brexiteer don't understand is that we were in the Common Market which had or was evolving towards a customs union and single market without problems. We were told it was only meant to be a trading bloc. But the federalists couldn't leave well alone. When l voted leave in my mind l wasn't opposing cooperation with Europe but ratification of Maastricht which meant "ever closer union" and transfer of government to Brussels. That was a step too far. The six countries who rejected Maastricht ratification in referendums initially were told to vote again but this time get it right (Lisbon). We had a good arrangement in the Common Market but they couldn't let sleeping dogs lie. Maastricht was used to bludgeon voters into supporting a United States of Europe. That's the end game. Now England is being punished for its desire to remain an independent sovereign nation.

    • @xaiano794
      @xaiano794 Před rokem

      Punished? How? We're on WTO rules, we're in full control and any failure is purely our own.
      The facts speak for themselves, total goods exports are down 15% since brexit and they haven't fallen in every other major developed economy.
      The OBR has a concise paper on this

    • @teniente_snafu
      @teniente_snafu Před rokem +1

      Who is punishing England? You got exactly what you wanted. This is no punishment but is what being outside of the EU is for all countries outside the EU who do not have proper mutual agreements with the EU.

    • @leonardgibney2997
      @leonardgibney2997 Před rokem

      @@teniente_snafu The problem was we had a kind of single market etc. in the old Common Market as l said. It was the failure to acquiesce to the ratification of Maastricht in fact "ever closer union" which meant we would be outside of it. We Brexiteers do not see the need to form a political union with those we trade with. The EU is saying, "to trade with Europe on
      the same terms you must agree to the ratification of the Maastricht Treaty". I don't see why l should have to sign up to a political movement in order to trade. No other country demands this. Is that wrong?

  • @Kicksnap78
    @Kicksnap78 Před rokem

    Sounds like he’s being coached by the panel.😮

  • @johngodley256
    @johngodley256 Před rokem +13

    The citizens of the UK always had the freedom to vote for their own govenment, look where it has taken them.
    Do these people really know what freedom means? There should be more emphasis on teaching people how
    to recognise charlatans. Once a tory, always a tory and even when he steals the shirt off my back.

    • @rhythmstic
      @rhythmstic Před rokem

      Most people ain't Tory or Liebour or Green.. they are common sense voters with no one to vote for except REFORM.

    • @joemdee
      @joemdee Před rokem

      Are you suggesting the freedom to vote should be taken from us?

    • @thesheperd7567
      @thesheperd7567 Před rokem

      The citizens of the UK belong to Scotland, NI, Wales and bigger England. It's England who delivers our governments. Add the population of the three smaller nations and they still can't outmatch the 17.4 million who voted to leave the EU. May was internally pushed into place, Boris, likewise, harped on about getting a deal done and England voted for him after his promises about getting his deal delivered, bridges, tunnels sea borders and hoakum poakum about NI even an underwater roundabout at the Isle of Man leading to Liverpool. Truss was flung in and straight back out, this latest PM likewise from an internal choosing. No public voting. How can Truss be so bad and then replaced by second best? He is obviously worse in their opinion and Scotland, NI and Wales has nothing to do with any of it and now bigger England doesn't get a say as the four nations crumble within a devolved union who arrogantly England call an independent sovereign when the sovereign was never lost and the union is being lost to a wreckless party of charlatans. Three nations can walk away and accept the Euro, England is stuck with the pound sterling and the disaster Brexit is, the voters have no way out of it.

    • @joemdee
      @joemdee Před rokem

      @@thesheperd7567 Scottish Labour also used to deliver our government before the tartan political nonentities came to power and f#c#ed up Scotland and weakened the British Labour Party. More Scots voted for Brexit than vote SNP.

  • @davidelliott5843
    @davidelliott5843 Před rokem +8

    Bank of England has needed to raise interest rates for at least a decade. They’ve used Brexit as the perfect excuse to cover their mismanagement.

    • @escfxp
      @escfxp Před rokem +2

      You could then also argue that Covid has been the perfect excuse to cover the misconceived idea of Brexit.

  • @ktu668
    @ktu668 Před rokem +4

    Nothing but a bunch of lies and excuses to rip the public off.

  • @roberthamilton4726
    @roberthamilton4726 Před rokem

    So they say but have they got the guts to ask the people? I doubt it, long live Brexit and our freedom.

  • @kanclerz9045
    @kanclerz9045 Před rokem +3

    Putins job... heheheh

  • @mikeg2939
    @mikeg2939 Před rokem +6

    A one sided discussion held "before the brexiteers join the committee." Shame they didn't do it when they were in the room so that we could hear their comments.

    • @victoredwards3959
      @victoredwards3959 Před rokem

      You mean their denial, that everything is ok , that we can go and do business with Indian and the rest of the world ? Those pathetic arguments, that they have been having for 5 years, while we are get poorer .

    • @mikeg2939
      @mikeg2939 Před rokem

      @@victoredwards3959 well, we'll never know as they chose to have this discussion without opposing views being heard. The bank of England have been criticised recently for not acting sooner to control inflation. This video looks set up and edited just to get these opinions voiced and broadcast. Pro EU chief cashier, pro EU independent adviser and Labour party chair, where's the balance here.

    • @MetalheadAndNerd
      @MetalheadAndNerd Před rokem +3

      What's interesting about adding people sticking their fingers into their ears and singing LALALALALALA to a discussion?

    • @victoredwards3959
      @victoredwards3959 Před rokem +1

      @@mikeg2939 , this is the problem with people who are anti EU, as soon as you hear the argument about the economic consequences of Brexit, the only response you have is to blame others , just as you people previously mentioned during the original discussion, that what the expect were telling us before the vote was project fear . Now that those realities are here for us to all see , a lot of this so called Brexit supporters don’t have an answer. Even the Brexit guy who negotiate Australia deal has come out to say how terrible it is . No Brexit MP or Brexit experts has been able to give us one benefit of Brexit. So what other side of the arguments do you people really have. Apart from blaming others for the consequences of Brexit? Even you are pointing fingers to the Bank of England.

    • @mikeg2939
      @mikeg2939 Před rokem +2

      @@victoredwards3959 that can be flipped over to read pro EU blame everything that happens on Brexit. Much of project fear was just that and never came to fruition.