If you have Greek staying in it raises a number of questions. Are they bound by the financial stability provisions that apply to non-Euro EU members? If not, do they benefit from trade provisions predicated on a trade area where those conditions are met? How hard do other members have to try to stay within the EU rules if Greece can break the rules without leaving? How long do members joining the EU have to keep to the entry criteria before they can 'let go' and go back to their old ways?
Valid questions; though ones that do not necessarily translate into significant EU-wide problems. Temporary exceptions to the rules in order to deal with exceptional circumstances, such as in the case of Greece, could in fact strengthen overall confidence among countries. It'd demonstrate a certain solidarity and promise of support even during dire times; without promoting fiscal negligence in other countries as nobody would want to become like Greece.
Kinda misses the point though. What financial markets care about is what rules get applied. Does the EU provide some kind of guarantee for debts of its member states, or not? Does the EU actually enforce economic standards or not? Does being in the EU make you a better credit risk, and to what extent? The inability of Greece and the EU to come to a workable deal doesn't reflect well on either party, because even now, several years on, it's not clear what's going to happen, or what rules will be applied.
I think some kind of special measures would be a good solution. However, Greece has rejected the special measures the EU have tried to enforce, for what seem to me to be fairly solid reasons. The EU hasn't really done enough to hammer out a workable solution - they don't trust the Greeks to solve the problem, and haven't solved the problem themselves.
In this case, sure. In the case of the UK leaving, there is of course only one possible scenario, and every other possibility is wrong.
I've never said or implied anything of the sort. Indeed, I've acknowledged a wide range of possible scenarios regarding a UK exit.
!!! I think we'll just agree to disagree there.
It is, however, beyond question that the consequences would *not* be positive. Just like the consequence of a Greek exit would not be positive.
If you assume that being in the EU is inherently better than not being the in EU, then yes, the consequence would not be positive, provided you look far enough in the future.
If you assume the opposite, that being outside the EU is inherently better than being inside, then, no, the consequence would be positive, provided you look far enough in the future.
What one can't do is assume that because EU=good, then it somehow doesn't matter what the rules are, or on what basis the EU is run. Because those questions challenge the basis of whether membership is actually good in the first place.
So while we're broadly in agreement that EU membership is good, that doesn't mean that these questions aren't significant, or are particular to Greece. Quite the opposite.
I have really only taken aim at those who would merrily pretend the UK could leave without any consequences whatsoever; all rainbow and sunshine.
Incorrect. You went gunning after Cameron in no uncertain terms, refusing to accept that the referendum might have been offered for purely UK-based reasons. More generally you've been opposing the idea that the EU could be anything but beneficial, and have consistently cast the reforms the UK are asking for as a spoilt child wanting special treatment.
You may have been
aiming for those who think the UK exit is without consequence, but your fire has been pretty indiscriminate.