If we have to check 350,000 additional residents a year, 1.5 millions for the full 4 year cycle, we need an awful lot more border agency staff and option out of the UN HR conventions.
I didn't mean checking all, just sampling at most and perhaps not even that. Hence my remark of any picked up. We'll need huge increase in the Border Agency anyway if we want to truly control immigration. I don't see the requirement for an address offends UN human rights, if it did our census is in breach.
Populous countries like China, India, Brazil etc are developing fast. Their consumption is going to sky-rocket very soon, leading to rapid inflation.
This is historic, only India is really gaining, the other BRICs in economic trouble.
One link, there's many more like it.
The EU is not as rich as one would believe, it will get comparatively poorer in the future when its share of consumption diminishes. It can't carry on without structural deficit, therefore no chance to even contemplate a universal income for its citizen.
All in good time, "Rome not built in a day" etc. As one of the World's largest entities it can never be an ignored force.
A two part Euro is like having green and red (non-convertible) dollars. Will it be acceptable to sovereign debt lenders? I don't think it would.
I don't think this problem need exist, the borrowing done by individual countries at their euro status. For borrowing from external countries by the European Bank there would have to be a different arrangement, possibly only at the superior euro level.
Your same comment can apply to the forthcoming negotiation with the EU. There isn't anything to stop the EU to do even better with the UK than previously with Switzerland, Norway and Canada.
True, as said, not a big problem as the Swiss negotiations show.
I believe the solutions to the EU's problems are even more difficult to find than brexit.
This has to be entirely opinion based of course, so little definitive can be said. I'm an optimist who believes the problems are soluble by such a big economic unit.
In summary, life ain't easy, most countries all around the world are struggling with big and often growing economic problems. These often include levels of international debt with near unsustainable levels of interest payments. The EU is far from alone in its problems, just part of a world in trouble.
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