Workingman wrote:Ah, I see you are one of those with the hate reflex.
Not at all. Let me be clear here. I don't care if we have a "useful idiot" in charge. It won't cause me too much pain and I won't be the one paying the price of his failure.
Talking about Germany and Italy hanging onto their manufacturing shows a very woeful lack of understanding of how the EU operates.
French buy French, just go and drive on the roads. Germans buy German and Italians buy Italian. The rest of the EU buys French and German because the French and German banks lend them the money to spend on their cars. Or they did until 2009. It is noticeable that both economies have struggled to perform post 2009 and if you actually care to read the EU press you find out that German manufacturing workers haven't had a meaningful wage rise in a decade. In fact Germany has run more inflation than the UK, due to the Euro stance on lending money and wages have deflated against that inflation.
As for Italy? Basket case may be a kind statement there. Yes it is back to growth but if you look at the table of businesses, of the top 10 businesses, 7 are service. One is Electricity which is not quite manufacturing, another is petroleum which they are not a net exporter of. Only Fiat, their #1 business, is actually manufacturing.
Let's get down to brass tacks here. Labour does not like businesses, it likes employees and employees rights. The more rights and benefits you give an employee, the less you manufacture with the same employee. I don't have to like it, but I do have to respect facts.
Italy retains its manufacturing crown because it sells to the Italian home market and to the EU as a whole. If it had to face uncontrolled world competition, half its manufacturing would fold in a decade.
If we are to talk about the UK manufacturing goods and selling them, then Dyson would be a good example. Dyson created his product and generated his market in the UK. He then shifted manufacturing to Asia. However his extremely large R&D unit remains in the UK.
This is what we do extremely well. We design the products for the world. We sell design services.
When we talk about world economies and where the UK fits in, do we want to be the labourer or the architect?
People talk about the UK "services" industry with disdain. We don't make anything therefore we're useless. Regardless of the fact that finance is only 12% of our economy, those who talk about the UK not making anything and deride the services industry, often talk about us as a nation of Bankers and not Makers.
The stuff we do make is extremely high value. Like our defence manufacturing. The 3rd largest in the world. But, no, those who want us to Make stuff, generally, don't want us to Make that stuff.
The UK is the white collar of the world manufacturing. We have stopped being the blue collar, apparently we need far more rights and money for our workers than that.
Just tell me, what is wrong with being the white collar workers of the world? India is extremely happy with it, India wants to become the white collar back office of the world. They can only do it by deposing the UK from that crown. Not supporting our service industries, voting in an economically hostile Labour government on old and outdated "ideals", is not going to stop India from taking our economy away from us.
I end as I started. Whatever Corbyn does or does not do, whether he gets into power or now, whether he does something so brain damaged as to indebt the nation for half a century nationalising our infrastructure, it won't hurt me.
Personally I believe in the principle of Enlightened self-interest. Unions, on the other hand, believe in Un-enlightened self interest. Where they would destroy a company before allowing their own to be fully competitive.
Want to go back to Labour and "manufacturing".
Here is a view I completely agree with. What have trade unions done for Great Britain?
Unions started out well. But Un-enlightened self interest did its job all too well thereafter.