- Opponents of the EU pay insufficient attention to domestic policy failures. The most serious constraints on UK economic growth – namely the absence of a functioning housing market, poor infrastructure and a comparatively poorly educated adult population – originate at home rather than in Brussels.
- Britain is not a frustrated globaliser inside the EU. Opinion polls do not suggest that Britons are more supportive of free trade than their French or German counterparts. Nor are Britons more in favour of immigration. Freed of the obligations of EU membership, the need to assuage public concerns about immigration would trump economic logic and evidence.
Whyte concludes: 'The British economy would not collapse if the country were to leave the EU. But the opposite claim – that leaving the EU would be a supply-side liberation for the economy and that the UK would be more open to the world outside the EU than inside – is nonsense. The reality is that the EU keeps its members ‘honest’ by anchoring their behaviour. In this regard, Britain is little different from other member-states'.
Written by Philip Whyte
sourche: http://www.cer.org.uk/publications/archive/essay/2015/do-uks-european-ties-damage-its-prosperity
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