| Brexit loses upto £90b a year in tax revenue on 18:28 - Nov 25 with 166 views | MattinLondon |
| Brexit loses upto £90b a year in tax revenue on 13:36 - Nov 25 by Prominent_Blue | My mistake as it is £9bn per year that we are saving. |
But the country isn’t saving anything at all. Am I being thick? |  | |  |
| Brexit loses upto £90b a year in tax revenue on 02:15 - Nov 26 with 109 views | quirkie | Why on Earth will the Labour party not take this on board and just say we will announce a new referendum on rejoining the EU. They do that and they will win the GE in 2029 with a landslide victory. |  |
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| Brexit loses upto £90b a year in tax revenue on 02:46 - Nov 26 with 99 views | mellowblue |
| Brexit loses upto £90b a year in tax revenue on 15:45 - Nov 25 by Kropotkin123 | Why particularly from the left? Is this a historical claim? Or do you mean recently, post Brexit? I'm interested in why you think particularly one side. |
Purely an impression I have that some Labour mps have a class hatred of the Tories which I don't see reciprocally. Especially some trying to boost their red credentials, on a moral crusade for the oppressed, against the wicked old Tories. A certain Mrs Rayner has certainly been scathing over the years. But this is only observational. It probably tends to be a noisy minority catchiing the ear as many mps get on with eachother very well in cross-party functions. It is probably historical going back to the likes of Dennis Skinner and beyond. |  | |  |
| Brexit loses upto £90b a year in tax revenue on 08:04 - Nov 26 with 61 views | DJR | In an article on the effects of Brexit, the latest Private Eye reports that, according to a WTO review of UK trade policy, there has been a 17% fall in UK exports since pre-Covid levels whilst other G7 countries' exports have increased by at least this much. EDIT: The article goes on to say. "This isn't the only Brexit reverse-dividend. Low productivity is exacerbated by poor levels of investment, in which Britain is already "well below other advanced economies". Here Brexit was another shot in the foot. Investment, said the WTO, was "dampened by uncertainty over UK-EU relations and political instability following the EU membership referendum" - along with other ills including high energy costs and weak competition (the latter making Reeves' reining in of the Competition and Markets Authority look short-termist at best)." [Post edited 26 Nov 8:53]
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