Where's the Insider Advantage?: A Review of the Evidence That Withdrawal from the EU Would Not Harm the UK's Exports or Foreign Investment in the UK

Where's the Insider Advantage?: A Review of the Evidence That Withdrawal from the EU Would Not Harm the UK's Exports or Foreign Investment in the UK

by Michael Burrage (Author)

Synopsis

The debate about whether the UK should continue to be a member of the EU is set to become more intense in the light of David Cameron's promise of an In/Out referendum in 2017, should the Conservatives be in government. There is no shortage of prophets of doom who warn of the serious economic consequences of withdrawal. How would we be able to continue trading with EU countries on anything like our present scale if we lacked 'club-membership' status? We would play no part in setting the rules by which such trade is controlled. And would investors be so willing to commit funds to the UK, if it were no longer a part of the world's largest trading group? The doomsayers, who include ex-prime ministers and exchancellors, ex-cabinet ministers and ex-EU commissioners, predict dire outcomes on both fronts if we withdraw. Remarkably, these people have never taken the trouble to collect the evidence that would support this view, although they were in the best position to do so. Where's the Insider Advantage? has been written by a voter who has grown tired of the evasion. Michael Burrage uses comparative methodology to test the benefits that EU membership is said to entail by contrasting the performance of the UK and other member states with that of similarly developed non-EU states, both in Europe and worldwide. To those with whom I spar on such matters, I am inclined to say: Defend the Single Market any way you wish, but do not argue it is good for British exports. It isn't, and has never been, so on that score you don't have a case. I make a similar reply whenever the FDI scare is raised. None of us understand the causal dynamics of investment decisions, so before frightening yourself and others with what might happen to the UK, look at the best available evidence about how other independent countries have fared. I sometimes add: If you don't believe my presentation of it, then go and look the EC's own reports. They have long since abandoned the idea that the Single Market is a magnet for foreign investors.

$3.51

Save:$13.45 (79%)

Quantity

1 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 172
Edition: Ill
Publisher: Civitas
Published: 07 Nov 2014

ISBN 10: 1906837651
ISBN 13: 9781906837655

Author Bio
Michael Burrage is a director of Cimigo which is based in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, and conducts market and corporate strategy research in China, India and 12 countries in the Asia Pacific region. He is also a founder director of a start-up specialist telecom company which among other things provides the free telephone interpreter service for aid workers and others in Afghanistan at www.afghaninterpreters.org. He is a sociologist by training, was a Fulbright scholar at the University of Pennsylvania, and lectured at the London School of Economics for many years, specialising in cross-national analysis of industrial enterprise and professional institutions. His years there were, however, interrupted by spells as a research fellow at Harvard, at the Swedish Collegium of Advanced Study, Uppsala, at the Free University of Berlin and at the Center for Higher Education Studies and the Institute of Government of the University of California Berkeley. He has been British Council lecturer at the University of Pernambuco, Recife, Brazil, and also a visiting professor at Kyoto, Hokkaido, Kansai and Hosei universities in Japan. He has written articles in a number of American, European and Japanese sociological journals, conducted a comparative study of telephone usage in Tokyo, Manhattan, Paris and London for NTT, and a study of British entrepreneurs for Ernst & Young. His recent publications include Revolution and the Making of the Contemporary Legal Profession: England, France and the United States (OUP) 2006 and Class Formation, Civil Society and the State: A comparative analysis of Russia, France, the United States and England (Palgrave Macmillan) 2008. He edited Martin Trow: Twentieth-century higher education: from elite to mass to universal (Johns Hopkins) 2010. He recently contributed to Professionen, Eigentum und Staat: Europaische Entwicklungen im Vergleich -19. und 20. Jahrhundert, (Wallstein Verlag) 2014.