by Suff » 22 Feb 2020, 10:55
Just like us, none of these countries ever really recovered from the financial crisis.
The EU continues to want more money and a higher % of each member states finances. Over the top of this, cross EU Vat goes to the EU too. Something which was not happening before.
The problem they face is that they lured in new members with promises of stability and funds but didn't really count the cost of 28 countries but only 6 net contributors to the budget.
When they lost the UK, they lost an economy which was nearly 1/6 of the EU GDP, but they lost net contributions to the budget of between 1/4 and 1/3.
Everyone is still coning to terms with that and it is not going down well.
The bigger problem is that if you take the commission figures and spreadsheet them out, you will find that the raise from 1% to 1.1% will probably give a figure that balances the UK loss. But in order to get the same disposable cash, everyone has to pay more and get less.
This is proving somewhat unpopular... The EU parliament wants an even bigger slice of cash to waste and that 0.3% increase in money is never going to fly without every state becoming a net contributor.
It is also causing havoc with countries like Spain, the 4th largest economy in the EU (now), but a net recipient of €1bn per year. Or €7bn over the budget period.
Italy doesn't help either, third largest economy and still a net recipient. Nobody is going to try and squeeze more out of Italy as they'd just have to feed it back in the back door via another bailout or even looser easing by the ECB.
It is no wonder that the IMF, no longer headed by a French person, is estimating that the UK will outgrow the EU by at least 50% over the next decade.
There are 10 types of people in the world:
Those who understand Binary and those who do not.