Latest Brexit articles

  • Dark days for a Davos Man

    So, who’s going to be our new prime minister? Or will Theresa May manage to wrestle on in the mud at No. 10? Never a dull moment these days. If nothing else, we should at least appreciate the theatre –…

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  • Letters from a banana republic

    Almost two years ago now, during my old job as a financial adviser, I attended an “annual masterclass” for fellow advisers. The event was held in a scenic location by a horse racing track in the Scottish countryside. During these…

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  • Brexit’s chaos is always just around the corner

    A medical emergency left my keyboard out of reach yesterday. I was unable to write to you on one of the most interesting days in British politics for many months. After six attempts to take a blood sample by nurses…

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  • How Italexit could sabotage Brexit

    Jokes about there not being an EU to exit from next year are making the rounds in the papers. My book about exactly how this will happen hit the printworks last night. You can get a copy here. But today…

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  • How Brexit boosted the budget

    For all the talk of ending austerity, you might think there was any in the first place. But I can’t see any budget surpluses on any charts. Government debt to GDP flatlined for three years around 88%, it didn’t really…

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  • Italy to abolish poverty. Or nationalise it.

    It’s Giovanni Tria’s 70th birthday tomorrow. His political career might not last that long though. The Italian government budget proposal is due by midnight tonight. Sort of. The finance minister must submit finance and growth targets. As the Bank of…

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  • A eurosceptic the Europeans can understand

    On Monday we looked at the future of the UK and EU. Yesterday, my thoughts turned into front page news. Prime Minister Theresa May threatened the EU with its worst fear. Turning the UK into a low-tax and business-friendly environment…

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  • You’re a bunch of sexist, racist, …

    What do the US Open umpire Carlos Ramos, Australian Greens Senator Adam Bandt, and Brexit voters have in common? They might have plenty in common, as far as I know. But I’m going to write about the odd abuse they’re…

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  • Dominic Raab finally figures it out

    There is hope for Brexit yet. And I’m not talking about Tony Blair’s comment to delay it. Although that is still my preferred outcome. Continuing Brexit negotiations after the May 2019 European elections would make things very interesting. French President…

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  • Nationalism or imperialism? Your choice

    Nationalism or imperialism? Take your pick. These days, empires are called unions, but they’re much the same. The idea of ruling over areas greater than nation states remains. Sure, under an empire you might still have the semblance of nation…

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  • Project Fear’s Friday funnies

    If you haven’t been reading Capital & Conflict for long, add some sugar to your coffee before you read it today. Or something stronger. The newspapers are building their own Project Fear over a no-deal Brexit. You might call it…

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  • The EU just gave it away

    Since the Brexit negotiations began, I couldn’t work out why they were so acrimonious. Free trade is mutually beneficial. Restricting it is mutually harmful. What is there left to argue about? The answer comes from British intelligence. At least that’s…

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  • The Bank turns bullish on Brexit

    The Bank of England (BoE) raised interest rates by 0.25% last week. It was an unanimous decision by all nine members of the committee. The Telegraph called it the second rate hike in a decade, but the first real one….

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  • How to make Germans buy you French food

    Today, I will show you a crafty scheme to make German taxpayers pay for your French cheese and wine. It’s called a hard Brexit. Which is now looking more likely. Another week, another Brexit deal falls by the wayside. You…

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  • Escape of the truth genie

    Before England got booted out of the World Cup last week, I asked you why politics has come to dominate so much of our lives, and what vacuum it is filling. I received many thoughtful responses – thank you to…

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  • A fervour for the fringe

    A colleague has just informed me he’s put a bet on. Not for money either. If England win the World Cup, he’s going to get his first tattoo: the three lions crest, with “thirty years of hurt” in bold beneath…

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  • Legislating Murphy’s Law into Brexit

    Brexit is roiling markets. The pound dumped, jumped and dumped again as ministers resigned. Is a soft Brexit more likely than ever? Is a hard Brexit on the cards now? Which of the two is good for Britain and bad…

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  • How not to pitch Britain

    I’m having a tough time trying to persuade the Japanese future in-laws to let their first-born move to London. Relations between Japan and our capital city have been strained since former mayor Boris Johnson flattened a ten-year-old Japanese child trying…

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  • No deal is better than any deal

    In 2016 I joined the Free Market Road Show. We travelled around Europe giving speeches about things like the EU and the sharing economy. The troupe mostly visited eastern European countries, where the battle of ideologies is still distinct. In…

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  • 10 Reasons to Leave the EU

    This article is an update on a pre-referendum article from Dominic Frisby. To read the original, click here. The EU referendum has come and gone, and Article 50 has been triggered. But Brexit is far from over. Some still don’t…

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  • A change of heart on Brexit

    I’ve argued for years that Britain should draw out the Brexit process as long as possible. Every week, the EU weakens. Every week, warnings about Brexit fade. But this week has me wondering if I was wrong. There seems to…

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  • Time to buy a house in Ireland

    My resignation from Capital & Conflict is pending. It hinges on the Brexit negotiations. And the suitability of property for sale in Ireland and Northern Ireland. Perhaps you can help. I’m looking for a pair of properties – one either…

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  • Brexit and the EU of 2019

    The absurdities of Brexit roll on. Boris Johnson supposedly told Germans that Brexit is a mess. No doubt everyone can agree some aspect of the process is a shambles. So why the controversy? Brexit negotiator David Davis found himself reassuring…

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  • How to negotiate the Brexit trade agreement

    Negotiations between the British government and the EU are hotting up. The new question is how many agreements they need to establish a trade agreement. If they can’t agree on this, there won’t be an agreement. Do you need an…

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  • The losers of globalisation are in the EU

    Government shutdowns are practically tradition in the US. They never impact anything in the end. I think it’s some sort of deal between politicians and the media to manufacture some airtime. So let’s look at our neighbours on the other…

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  • A chocolate shortage when pigs fly

    We interrupt your coverage of Brexit, bitcoin and central banking to cover something far more important. According to The Sun, experts are concerned chocolate will run out in the next 30 years. Climate change will make it too hot to…

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  • Murphy’s EU law

    One of the longer running themes of newsletter writing is to stand up for the downtrodden. The meek and weak. The people who newspapers and politicians don’t take sides with. It’s gotten us into plenty of trouble in the past….

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  • An agreement to agree is no agreement at all

    The war is over, but the battle has only just begun. That’s the summary of Prime Minister Theresa May’s agreement with the EU. We now know how much we’ll pay the EU… well, approximately how much. What’s a few billion…

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  • Northern Ireland in trade purgatory

    Reading the latest news about Brexit makes me feel sick. The whole debate is entirely absurd. The problems are artificial. The political posturing self-serving. A thousand political problems and structures have created a thousand more, none of which need exist…

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  • How to trade Brexit for 20% returns

    With the British people finally united over Brexit, one profession has argued otherwise. The discrepancy could cause Prime Minister Theresa May’s downfall. But it also reveals two ways to profit. One for a 20% return per year. Sorry to be…

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  • How to fail at Brexit

    There are two ways to muck up Brexit. The first is to fail to leave the EU at all. Or to fail to leave to an extent that allows Britain to distance itself from the EU on key issues. Not…

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  • Exposing Brexit lies

    The latest bout of Brexit coverage leaves me with nothing but questions. A lot of them are rhetorical thanks to the nonsense being spouted. A Capital & Conflict reader feedback email is in the works, so you might be able…

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  • Brexit negotiations: a Theatre of the Absurd

    Time is ticking away for a Brexit deal. If the next hurdle of the negotiations isn’t completed by December, then vaulting the remaining hurdles by March 2019 will be too difficult. Bloomberg summarised: At a meeting in Brussels on Wednesday,…

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  • The EU and UK on Deal or No Deal

    Imagine playing the TV show Deal or No Deal with your entire family. Not in the stands, giving you “advice”, but there on stage with you. You all have to make the choices together. For most families, it’d be a…

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  • Why Brexit will slowly die

    Today is the day Brexit reaches our Parliament. The first pieces of Brexit’s legislation hit the agenda. The spectacle promises to be entertaining. As always, the British political system has created an ambiguous and contradictory situation which makes a Brit…

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  • How to pay for more debt with less income

    It’s a sign of the times. Provident Financial and Royal Mail were kicked out of the FTSE 100 index yesterday. The Royal Mail blamed its slump on Brexit. A lack of confidence is reducing direct mail advertising. Nothing to do…

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  • Brexit negotiations… over what?

    Posting on social media is keeping the politicians too busy to reform anything these days. It’s not just Donald Trump on Twitter though. EU pollies are avid twits too. Politics seems to have become an ideological drug dealer. People need…

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  • What do Britain’s symptoms suggest?

    What a glorious day. It has happened at last. Health and safety’s overzealousness has struck Parliament where it hurts – right in the bong. Big Ben’s bong, to be precise. According to various accounts of an enormous parliamentary furore, nobody…

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  • Brexit is a trade-off with a worse alternative

    Economics, and life, is about trade-offs. You have to choose the best possible option from a selection of alternatives. Analysing just one of those alternatives and declaring it good or bad does not in any way make it the right…

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  • The truth about Brexit emerges

    What sort of Britain do you want to live in? We probably can’t even agree on the features of the Britain we actually do live in. According to President Donald Trump, we don’t even live in Britain at all: “you…

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  • I’ll resign and become a smuggler

    Smuggling is probably the most honourable profession around. Risking jail time for your customers is quite a service! Second only to people smuggling – risking your own freedom for the freedom of others. Unfortunately neither smuggling nor people smuggling has…

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  • Does David Davis speak German?

    It’s Brexit negotiation day today. David Davis, the exiting the European Union secretary and potential prime minister in waiting, is meeting the European Union’s chief negotiator Michel “Barmy” Barnier in Brussels. Barmy Barnier had previously warned that missing the first…

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  • The wrong hung parliament

    Well, what do you make of that? A hung parliament and nobody is quite sure why, how or what really happened. One thing’s for sure. The pound wasn’t happy, falling 2.5%: Source: Yahoo Finance It’s difficult to make sense of…

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  • The Brexit maths is simple

    With her local policies causing nothing but problems for Prime Minister Theresa May, she’s turned attention back to Brexit to bolster support. But now her opposition has sanctioned Brexit too. Jeremy Corbyn promises to get a deal with the EU….

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  • Theresa May’s triple Gaugamela strategy exposed

    The papers have new French president Emmanuel Macron down as a europhile. Apparently he’s going to be a tough negotiator when it comes to Brexit. I explained yesterday why he’s more likely to encourage a deal than cause problems. But…

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  • The EU bluffs on an open hand

    I promised you an explanation of where the cult of central banking leads us. But that’ll have to wait. The Brexit battle is hardening up. Everyone involved is puffing their chest and making tough statements they’ll later have to walk…

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  • Theresa May’s crafty Brexit betrayal

    Theresa May wants an election in June. So we’re going back to the polls once more. In true EU style, the rejection of the EU in the referendum wasn’t clear enough. Please vote again… It might seem like this time…

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  • Computer says “no” to Brexit

    Brexit is done for. A parliamentary inquiry confirmed it on 31 March. A few hours later and the story would’ve read like an April Fools joke. I’m still not completely sure it isn’t. Here’s the totally surreal reason Brexit won’t…

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  • “Smart Brexit”

    It’s fitting that Theresa May had to address her letter to Donald Tusk. Not on an official level – she had no real choice on that front. Unless there’s a WhatsApp group with all 27 heads of state in it…

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  • EU threatens UK with self-harm

    Now that the prime minister has sent in her notice to leave the EU, attention turns to the negotiations. Not just because they’re going to determine whether Brexit is a success. They’re also an opportunity to make money. Every sneeze…

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  • A Brexit steal is better than a deal

    Is tomorrow independence day? Theresa May’s declaration of Article 50 is widely expected. Here’s the relevant clause in all its glory: 1. A Member State which decides to withdraw shall notify the European Council of its intention. In the light…

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  • Why a 60 billion euro Brexit is cheap

    The EU’s chief negotiator, Michel “Barmie” Barnier, wants the UK to pay around €60 billion to the EU as part of a Brexit deal. That’s around six times our average net annual contribution from 2011 to 2015. Former justice minister…

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  • Please slow down Brexit

    Barmie Barnier cracks down The Financial Times reports on the latest threats from Europe. Michel “Barmie” Barnier, the EU’s lead negotiator and former French minister of the environment and way of life, is getting creative. He claims a “hard Brexit”…

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  • Introducing the Brexit Antagonist

    Yesterday we left you wondering who Barmie Barnier is. Quite simply, he’s the key to Brexit. He’ll decide whether the referendum was a mistake or the beginning of something great. True, we’ll get something in between good and bad in…

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  • Will the Deep State halt Brexit?

    In today’s letter… why Brexit may never happen… a very British coup… a warning from history… and “operation Clockwork Orange” returns. Tonight MPs will vote to grant, or deny, the government the right to trigger Article 50 and make good…

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  • The fight against Brexit

    In this issue of Capital & Conflict… the irony of sovereignty… asking the European Court for permission to leave… inflation returns… how to admit you’re wrong like a central banker… and why gold is suddenly back in fashion. Well you…

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  • Britain is booming – a post-Brexit opportunity

    What’s the mood in Westminster ahead of Brexit negotiations? If you ask MP Steve Baker, it’s positive. Last week, The Fleet Street Letter’s Charlie Morris sat down at Portcullis House with Steve to talk about what’s coming next for Brexit…

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  • Keep your cake, Donald

    Ah, Donald Tusk you absolute scallywag. Surely you have better things to do than talk Brexit all day? What am I saying. You’re a politician. You’re an EU politician. Of course you don’t have anything of real value to contribute!…

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  • Tend your garden and mind your own business

    Well if this is the Brexit disaster the establishment predicted, bring on the sequel! Not to be too flippant, but the news just keeps getting worse if you expected Brexit to trigger an immediate catastrophe in Britain. That doesn’t mean…

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  • Debunking a “soft” Brexit

    Hands up if you want Britain to join the North Sea Union? If you’ve never heard of it before, don’t worry. It doesn’t exist yet. But yesterday Belgian political leader Geert Bourgeois put the idea forward as a “solution” to…

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  • Brexit denial is a psychology of despair

    Remain lost the war, says Tim Price. Better by far that they come to terms with the peace as quickly as possible.

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  • Britain after Brexit: let the bull market begin

    Maybe Britain should have a national identity crisis more often. The FTSE 100 became the first big European index to enter into bull market territory when it closed at 6,682. It’s up 7% year-to-date but more than 20% from the…

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  • Devil take the hindmost

    Germany up. France up. Italy up. Hungary, Iceland and the Republic of Ireland on fire in the football. Everything’s coming up Europe today! Stockmarkets on the continent have not let last night’s thunderstorms in Britain dampen their spirits. The late…

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  • This is not your Britain

    Let’s take a step back from the abyss. Whether the financial world ends in fire or ice, it still ends. Let’s admire the view from the edge of the abyss. Better yet, let’s ponder the latest note from Goldman Sachs…

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  • What’s best for Britain is not what you think

    Tell me truly: is it possible that Brexit is bad for the City but good for Britain? No one’s really asked this question yet, at least not directly. As someone who’s in the financial services industry, at least nominally, it’s…

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  • Buy on the sound of Brexit?

    Labour’s deputy leader Tom Watson wants Prime Minister David Cameron to ban hedge funds from running exit polls on 23 June. It’s not because he’s worried they’ll influence the vote. That’s happened in the US before, where exit polls in…

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  • UK Plc’s net liability grows

    Last week I showed you that if you took all the UK government liabilities – central and local government, plus pensions and the banks – that the figure was bigger than just the official debt-to-GDP number. Well the government published its…

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  • Your pension under nuclear attack

    It’s not quite going nuclear. But chancellor George Osborne has played the “pensions” card in the Brexit debate. He’s said that younger individuals would be “between ÂŁ223 and ÂŁ335 a year worse off in retirement.” That’s if you’ve got ÂŁ20,000…

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  • Death crossroads for globalisation

    It will cost you and your family ÂŁ220 to leave the European Union, according to figures released today by HM Treasury. The expected cost increase is based on a projected 12% decline in sterling over two years (after Brexit), and…

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  • Carney finally earning a pay cheque

    Mark Carney hasn’t done a lick of work since becoming governor of the Bank of England (BoE) in 2013. He’s got an eight year term. He says he’ll step down after five. But the bank rate set by the BoE’s…

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  • Brexit “will be like Dunkirk again”

    Lower growth and higher inflation. Or liberation from a “mosquito infested swamp and the greatest economy in the world.” You couldn’t get a bigger contrast of possibilities. But that’s how the public debate on Brexit is shaping up. Which side…

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  • Brexit would be “catastrophic”

    The civil war on the Tory party heated up this weekend. The leadership is doubling down on its anti-Brexit rhetoric. Chancellor George Osborne took to the airwaves and said it would “be catastrophic for people’s jobs and their incomes and…

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  • Brexit price tag goes up again

    The closer the 23 June referendum gets, the more expensive leaving the European Union gets, at least if figures from the “Remain” camp are to be believed. Former UK Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling says that the UK economy…

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  • OECD counts Brexit cost

    Another international organisation has warned Britons that leaving the European Union will be costly. This time it’s the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). You can read its report if you like. It’s called “The Economic Consequences of Brexit:…

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  • Save British justice

    “Safer, stronger and better off” says the prime minister, to which one might retort “how can we possibly be safer if, as might potentially happen to any one of us, we can be arrested without the least shred of evidence…

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  • Your friend President Obama has some advice

    I’ve been asked by several readers whether I think the Brexit campaign will succeed. My answer is that the people who will vote to leave are more passionate and committed than the people who want to stay. But as far as I can…

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  • Brexit inconsistencies

    Reader mail continues to pour in on George Osborne’s forecast that Brexit would cost each UK household ÂŁ4,300 by 2030. One obvious criticism: how can you claim, on the one hand, that we shouldn’t leave because a post-EU future poses…

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  • UK current account deficit hits record high

    Is Brexit-induced volatility blowing out the UK current account deficit and causing the pound to slide against the US dollar and the euro? That question rears its thorny head this week with two pieces of macroeconomic data. Let’s do the…

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  • Bank of England girds itself for Brexit

    The countdown to Brexit continues. The Bank of England’s Financial Policy Committee (FPC) – the lesser known and lesser important cousin to the Monetary Policy Committee – released notes from its meeting on 23 March concluding that ‘Brexit is a…

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  • UK trade data and the rotten heart of Europe

    We recorded an exclusive interview between Merryn Somerset Webb (editor-in-chief) of the magazine, and Bernard Connolly, author of The Rotten Heart of Europe. The interview took place yesterday and will be published in two parts next week. It was an absolute…

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  • Brexit to turn UK into Bolivia

    Britain could be the next Bolivia, according to comments made about the consequences of Brexit. “It is obvious to us that if Britain was outside the EU, we would be as reliant on the third-country rules as Bolivia,” said TheCityUK’s…

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  • Britain is best in Europe, just not the EU

    Thatcher’s return to lead the Brexit Campaign continued when she reread her speech about the relationship between Britain and the EU. Among her most noteworthy points delivered once more, harkening back to the 1988 speech in the Bruges Belfry, is…

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  • Paris and Berlin break out the angry words

    Like jilted and verbally abusive lovers, Paris and Berlin are lashing out at London. French President Francois Hollande tried to diplomatic about it. But he certainly had a ‘tone.’ Speaking after a summit with fellow Europhile David Cameron, Hollande said,…

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  • Tim Price: Leaving the EU is not the end of the world

    The EU is nothing more than a gravy train for unelected Brussels-based bureaucrats, says Tim Price. The sooner we are out of it, the better.

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  • Referendum blunders

    Dan Denning and the management team are busy learning leadership skills. Or so they say. So it falls to your frequent guest editor to fill you in. Sticking with the day’s theme, this article is all about leadership and who could…

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  • Good news for your habeas corpus

    The nitty gritty details of a Brexit are starting to emerge. Anatole Kaletsky, the chief economist and co-chairman of Gavekal Dragonomics and former columnist at The Times of London, has pointed out that the World Trade Organisation would have a lot…

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  • Why the pound really fell

    The Fleet Street Letter editor Charlie Morris claimed right of reply in today’s Capital & Conflict. The former platoon commander of the Grenadier Guards sits next to me when he’s in the office. And he didn’t like my Saturday Capital…

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  • Boris backs Brexit

    Prime Minister David Cameron has a date. The 23rd June is set in stone. Not that anyone knows what they’ll be voting for by then. David Cameron’s deal with the EU may be more or less clear. But what would…

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  • Don’t vote for Brexit

    Before we get to why I think the Brexit vote is a red herring, and what you should do about it. Should you vote for Brexit in the upcoming referendum? I think that’s a waste of your valuable time. There…

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  • British banks divided on EU membership

    European banks would be heaving a big sigh of relief on the Japan stimulus and China news. The banks found themselves in the cross hairs last week. It’s been a long time since investors got as panicky about bank shares…

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