
How many tiny fragments will the EU have been split into by 2050? More or less than 100?
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tzor wrote:It's complex because prior to Brexit, they voted to remain in the UK. While they did vote to stay in the EU, I think the financial ties to England are stronger than the ones to the European Mainland. Even if they get the referendum, it would be a squeaker of a vote.
Ray Rider wrote:Exactly. I think Scotland will rethink things once they see how strong the UK is outside the EU and how the EU is gradually disintegrating economically.
Thorthoth wrote:Tibet... Taiwan... HongKong... Macao... Manchuria...
How many nations would China split into if it wasn't run by brutal draconian quasi-Commie fascists?
2dimes wrote:Could they afford to do it. I presume the Scottish pound would drop pretty good, it is equal right now it just has different picture correct?
It's a bit different from somewhere like Hong Kong, because there's just a stubby rock fence physically separating them right now and potentially you would need a border. I think it's a great romantic notion that they could seperate but pretty impractical.
2dimes wrote:What are your thoughts on Alba going back to being a country?
Could they afford to do it. I presume the Scottish pound would drop pretty good, it is equal right now it just has different picture correct?
It's a bit different from somewhere like Hong Kong, because there's just a stubby rock fence physically separating them right now and potentially you would need a border. I think it's a great romantic notion that they could seperate but pretty impractical.
Kind of like Quebec, they hate the English speaking parts of Canada for taking over. They can't afford to operate without it though, so they are basically stuck.
mrswdk wrote:2dimes wrote:Could they afford to do it. I presume the Scottish pound would drop pretty good, it is equal right now it just has different picture correct?
Scotland - like most regions of the UK - receives more in tax from the UK government than it pays in, so overall Scotland would immediately lose money by leaving the UK.
There is no currency called the Scottish Pound. Everyone in the UK uses British Pounds, just sometimes the pounds printed in Scotland or Northern Ireland have different designs on them.It's a bit different from somewhere like Hong Kong, because there's just a stubby rock fence physically separating them right now and potentially you would need a border. I think it's a great romantic notion that they could seperate but pretty impractical.
Also if there was another vote in independence now all the evidence suggests Scotland would vote against independence anyway.
2dimes wrote:So you think Quebec would be just as strong economically if they separated and became a country Duke?
2dimes wrote:I think as the OP points out Scotland gets similar transfer payments. They would need a currency if they left and that alone would be pretty expensive if they did not start using Euros or something. If they were using Euros and economically seperate that would be completely different.
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