Gob wrote:Funny, people who know what they are talking about still fear a UK exit, but not for the reasons Aspergers boy thinks.
If the UK votes to leave the EU next week, the move could ultimately lead to the bloc's disintegration, Germany's foreign minister has warned.
Frank-Walter Steinmeier was speaking near Berlin after talks with his French counterpart, Jean-Marc Ayrault.
Germany is the UK's biggest trade partner in Europe.
"A vote to leave would shake the union," Mr Steinmeier said at a joint news conference in Brandenburg.
"It would not just carry on as 28 [members] minus one. It would require concerted efforts to ensure that the union holds together and that a decades-long, successful integration effort does not end in disintegration
I have given reasons that Brexit would be harmful to the UK. And proven them true against your uninformed objections. I have not pretended to give all the reasons that Brexit would be harmful to everyone else. Obama has advised against it because he believes it would be harmful to us as well. He is right.
The natural tendency is for regional agreements to expand and deepen between countries and other political units especially when the individual countries are small, like the EU, but the aggregate is larger. The EU is close to the size of the US so when it can function as an economic unit it trades at a greater advantage vs the rest of the world. There are also huge economies of scale when you only need 1 regulatory body and 1 set of regulations instead of 20-ish.
A slightly different sort of example is the fact that 11 other states have voluntarily adopted California's more stringent vehicle emissions standards because they knew that car manufacturers would already be making "California compliant" cars because of the size of the Calif. market so they saved the expense of developing and figuring out how to enforce their own standards and got the environmental benefits of the lowest emissions. They abandoned their "Gawd-given" autonomy because it made sense.
A further consideration is how businesses have tended to develop ever-more intrusive and complex standards for regulating each others behavior, like ISO, even across national boundaries. We do business with a lot of companies who are at risk of substantial losses if we screw up so we have to have an organizational structure which is transparent to them. They come and audit our processes and the way we regulate them because they have a huge interest in doing so. 12 inch computer wafers are processed at a rate of 1 or 2 per minute and each is worth ca $70,000 so a material problem can create a multi-million dollar problem very quickly. They have to have a way of 'seeing' into how we do things which reassures them that we have mitigated risks as well as is possible. In doing this there is an inherent loss of individual autonomy, it cannot be avoided. And that is much like the loss of autonomy of the UK vs the EU because what is true narrowly of businesses is also true of how we interact as larger political units.
yrs,
rubato



