When I look at the EU you can see a huge number of countries like France, Spain and Italy have crippling debts.
Over the next few years assuming we stay out of the EU these will be the benchmarks to see how our economy compares to theirs. Lets not pretend everything is rosy in the EU its is creating huge debts for many countries there. They are all making huge interest payments and their people are suffering. There was bound to be turbulence as we left the EU and then the pandemic hit adding a huge extra layer of debt. Also if you are comparing growth again this is a ridiculous way of comparing economies. Growth can mean more debt if it results in a higher level of imports. It's a balanced economy we should be looking for and a reduction in imports and increase in exports. Liz Truss's policies of high growth through huge additional borrowing was absolutely moronic. Many EU countries are getting growth through additional borrowing although not on the scale Liz Truss came up with I think. They are kickstarting their economies in a similar way. This might work for Germany or the Netherlands who have done well in the EU but is likely bad news for France, Italy and Spain in the long term.
Time will tell indeed, and it will lead to disappointment for you as our decline continues and the EU overall improves, albeit variably.
Look again at the graph Woosh posted, but this time with an open mind for a change, not ignoring the gains from being in the EU. Initially our debt fell due to North Sea oil, no credit to the EU. But then we enjoyed a long period of lower debt thanks to the benefits of membership trading.
That was brought to an end by the sub prime disaster, the stupidity of the USA and Britain's investing grossly overvaluing property in a fools paradise until the bubble burst. So from 2008 you see a huge increase in debt thanks to vast sums of borrowed money spent in bailing out the banks during the recession the sub prime caused. Nothing to do with the EU where their property markets are infinitely more sensible than ours, the problem caused entirely by ourselves.
And then of course Covid struck and once again we grossly mishandled that, creating anothet billion or so of debt with the idiocy of paying businesses to close and paying people not to work. I argued bitterly against that in the Brexit thread, drawing comparisons particularly with Sweden due to some very similar circumstances. They didn't do what we did, relying largely on voluntary action so not suffering a huge increase in debt. I was proved right since we ended up with 40% more covid deaths than Sweden pro rata, despite all the wasteful spending.
So once again that huge debt increase from Covid was nothing to do with the EU, being entirely of our own foolish making.
The graph says it all, the EU helping us to have a stable lower debt which we wrecked twice with first, sub prime costs, then Covid unnecessary costs.
However I do fully agree with you about the stupidity of living in trading deficit while borrowing to maintain living standards. But the underlying cause there is a our very low productivity making us uncompetitive through high costs, and that certainly isn't the EU's fault.
We've a choice of ways out of our mess, either get a whole lot more competitive in the international markets, or resign ourselve to a much lower standard of living. That's true in or out of the EU.
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