Oh dear, something kicking off at Oxford Circus
In all of its parts, the EU employs about 46,000 people, half of them in the Commission. It sounds a lot, but they do cover 500 million people. Birmingham City Council employs over 33,000 for a population of 1.1m.
Undoubtedly some of them are very well paid, especially the Commissioners and senior ECJ judges. But none of them are as well paid as quite a few U.K. senior civil servants, who also enjoy very generous pensions. If you don’t feel that you get any direct or indirect benefit from the £115 per year of your income tax (if you are an average level U.K. tax payer) that goes to the EU, then anything spent on the EU infrastructure is a waste of money. As most of the benefit is indirect and clouded by years of fake press stories about bananas and gravy trains, and Tory MPs whining, I’m not surprised a lot of people don’t see the value and think it’s all a rip off.
The salaries and benefits of the EU civil servants are set and have to be signed off by the Council of Ministers and European Parliament. They are designed to sit within the span of public sector pay across the EU. If they earned a lot more than the average then too many good people would leave their national systems, a lot less and the EU wouldn’t be able to recruit. Compared to the senior levels of the private sector all of these senior public servants do rather poorly financially, though I suppose they have a bit more job security (unless in the case of the EU, where British civil servants will be unemployed in April 2019).
I’m sure the citizens of Europe could get better value from the EU, it’s a pretty flawed organisation, but so are all large bureaucracies public or private, and a brutal fact is that if you want intelligent people to work hard for you, whether it’s public or private sector, you have to reward them.
Sorry Stainsey, but if you cast your vote on this alone it’s too late for me to change your mind now.
Really? Good!
You can take it from me that I’m right mate.Thanks for your answer, something to think about but of course you’re coming from the ‘stay’ camp...I’m sure there are others from the ‘leave’ camp who will say different (not saying which side is right or wrong).
No it wasn’t on that alone BUT probably one of the main reasons.....
You can take it from me that I’m right mate.
Right at the beginning of this thread (I think) I said that I think that the EU needs big reform, Juncker is the worst possible advert for it, and though my preference would be for the U.K. to stay in and drive the reform we have always been a poor participant and it might be best if we just left them to it, rather than holding the whole thing back. I don’t think I really understood the consequences then, and no one could have foreseen the rolling fiasco that is the Tory implementation.
You can take it from me that I’m right mate.
Right at the beginning of this thread (I think) I said that I think that the EU needs big reform, Juncker is the worst possible advert for it, and though my preference would be for the U.K. to stay in and drive the reform we have always been a poor participant and it might be best if we just left them to it, rather than holding the whole thing back.
Has any definitive figure been put on the amount we put in to the amount we take out ?
Probably very hard to equate but is an honest question nonetheless.
None of us cared or knew before the vote that has to be said since then money figures were introduced to whip up a frenzy of protest imo. No doubt the EU system and most countries in the west could do with reform. The simple question of money in money out I would never believe was that simple before or now ... no one knows I am guessing but someone push a figure on the side of a bus and pointed that to the NHS and the rest is history.
I accept it of course but I have never been able to understand the post vote events and I think both sides of the vote are still guessing
I honestly still think the real plan for all of this has not revealed itself but we ave a divided nation
I saw this. The Aussies and Kiwis pissed off because of the way we propose to allocate quotas, which means NZ won’t be able to send us limitless amounts of cheap lamb (which would destroy the British sheep farming industry, as a Tory MP has pointed out) and Australia won’t be able to send of loads of Ugg boots (can’t think of anything else they export).http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-42121442
Read about this issue some time ago. Apparently something that the UK and EU have already agreed on (though how exactly is hard to understand when they formally have not discussed trade as yet), but other countries are not happy about it. WTO rules aren't going to be problem free with Brexit.
Australia won’t be able to send of loads of Ugg boots (can’t think of anything else they export)
"Ugg" boots are American,I saw this. The Aussies and Kiwis pissed off because of the way we propose to allocate quotas, which means NZ won’t be able to send us limitless amounts of cheap lamb (which would destroy the British sheep farming industry, as a Tory MP has pointed out) and Australia won’t be able to send of loads of Ugg boots (can’t think of anything else they export).
Comments from the British judge on the ECJ have been leaked. Only one of the British ministers involved in Brexit actually understands how complicated it is, according to this bloke. And it’s not David Davies, who flew to Paris to talk to the foreign minister of France, and forgot to mention Brexit during the meeting.
We're all doomed............doomed I tell yer!
I saw this. The Aussies and Kiwis pissed off because of the way we propose to allocate quotas, which means NZ won’t be able to send us limitless amounts of cheap lamb (which would destroy the British sheep farming industry, as a Tory MP has pointed out) and Australia won’t be able to send of loads of Ugg boots (can’t think of anything else they export).
Comments from the British judge on the ECJ have been leaked. Only one of the British ministers involved in Brexit actually understands how complicated it is, according to this bloke. And it’s not David Davies, who flew to Paris to talk to the foreign minister of France, and forgot to mention Brexit during the meeting.
How can you forget the Vino Stan?