terça-feira, 11 de outubro de 2016
TEc - The road to Brexit - Which road will it be?
Brexit is the topic of the day for learned opinion-makers as well as laymen across the length and breadth of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
As it is the political fallout has been immense following a popular decision whose economic repercussions are beginning to sink in. The value of pound sterling is up to now the major practical barometer of things to come in a worst-case-scenario.Words such as hard or soft are commonly used to gauge the wide gap of possible consequences to the British economy.At the end of the day my own assessment indicates that it very much remains very early days to substantively assess anything at all. Even the currency's crash may be down to nervousness rather than a perceived deterioration of the UK's future trading conditions.Why then the rush of bad news when hardly anything is known about the UK's future relationship with the other 27 countries of the European Union? As the current UK government feels the ground ahead of invoking Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty, the European Commission and several heads of government have publicly voiced their views.I am ever amazed at how unprepared hardline Brexiteers seemingly were about their case as much as the apparently orchestrated punishing statements made by leaders of Europe's other relevant nations hellbent(?) on exacting an expensive price on Britons for their irresponsible folly(?).Few seem to take the moderate constructive path that will ensure a positive outcome for UK citizens, European citizens at large and, above all, Europe as a geographic, cultural, economic and military bloc. Yet, that would seem to me the only acceptable way forward in the new context.If Democracy is the foundation, the cornerstone of the European edifice then it need be fully upheld and respected especially so when outcomes do not conform to the expected. Such is the case after the In/Out UK referendum result became known regardless of late discussions about the merits/demerits of calling for one on an issue as complex.The UK's future is neither as bleak as some are painting it to be nor as rosy as others would wish the rest of us to believe.Voting to quit the EU was a deeply political choice with major economic and social implications.Politicians on both sides of the Channel must rise up to the challenges and hammer out the best deal for the UK and the remaining 27 members of the EU.A potential lose a lot-lose something must be turned into a win-win for the benefit of Europe as a whole.
As it is the political fallout has been immense following a popular decision whose economic repercussions are beginning to sink in. The value of pound sterling is up to now the major practical barometer of things to come in a worst-case-scenario.Words such as hard or soft are commonly used to gauge the wide gap of possible consequences to the British economy.At the end of the day my own assessment indicates that it very much remains very early days to substantively assess anything at all. Even the currency's crash may be down to nervousness rather than a perceived deterioration of the UK's future trading conditions.Why then the rush of bad news when hardly anything is known about the UK's future relationship with the other 27 countries of the European Union? As the current UK government feels the ground ahead of invoking Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty, the European Commission and several heads of government have publicly voiced their views.I am ever amazed at how unprepared hardline Brexiteers seemingly were about their case as much as the apparently orchestrated punishing statements made by leaders of Europe's other relevant nations hellbent(?) on exacting an expensive price on Britons for their irresponsible folly(?).Few seem to take the moderate constructive path that will ensure a positive outcome for UK citizens, European citizens at large and, above all, Europe as a geographic, cultural, economic and military bloc. Yet, that would seem to me the only acceptable way forward in the new context.If Democracy is the foundation, the cornerstone of the European edifice then it need be fully upheld and respected especially so when outcomes do not conform to the expected. Such is the case after the In/Out UK referendum result became known regardless of late discussions about the merits/demerits of calling for one on an issue as complex.The UK's future is neither as bleak as some are painting it to be nor as rosy as others would wish the rest of us to believe.Voting to quit the EU was a deeply political choice with major economic and social implications.Politicians on both sides of the Channel must rise up to the challenges and hammer out the best deal for the UK and the remaining 27 members of the EU.A potential lose a lot-lose something must be turned into a win-win for the benefit of Europe as a whole.
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