It depends on your view on integration and future direction doesn’t it?
The Lisbon treaty weakened our veto in several areas and there is every likelihood that will continue further. Stronger fiscal ties and currency union are inevitable as is collective foreign policy
An inability to operate independently in these areas are crippling many Eu countries who cannot devalue or set their own budgets
You can’t just view a short term arrangement against a potential long term federal strategy. Italy as an example when polled believes they have had no benefit from the Eu economically as a majority view
It’s ironic that many people who abhor federalism actually like it in this particular issue
I’m not sure it does depend on that at all if you’re considering it purely from an economic viewpoint. It seems like you’re making more of a political argument. Yes some of your points relate to fiscal policy but is that an issue that has or will affected the U.K.?
Hypothetically speaking, let say in future there is a closer fiscal union and this creates some kind of negative effect, likely a Eurozone recession. It seems you’re suggesting we’d be more able to dictate our own policy to protect us, is that enough of a benefit particularly if we’ve sacrificed growth to get there?
Regarding the Italy poll, what people perceive and what effect it’s had are likely two different things. Or are you saying economists were polled?
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