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So is the stock in all the Eastern European shops produced in the UK? Or is it shipped in from Eastern Europe. |
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edit: Dyson launched a $360 million plant in Tuas, Singapore in 2013, which can produce 4 million digital motors a year The EU began negotiations with Singapore in March 2010 remind me again, in which year was the Brexit referendum? |
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And as posted above, Dyson moving production to Singapore (and other countries) was done years before Brexit was a true proposition, so was therefore simply a business costs move, nothing else |
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Dyson's getting a bit of a hard time. He warned us many years ago that if we didn't join the Euro then he would expand overseas instead. We can't say we weren't told, though I would prefer to lose Dyson than gain the Euro. ;)
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Good post Andrew, the link is to an article from Sun 5 Nov 2000 showing that he thought the EURO would be beneficial to his (and other) businesses.
The man stood by his convictions and moved his business, fair play. |
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Reality is finally dawning in Dublin, it seems. In the event of No Deal, it’s not the British erecting a border they have to worry about, it’s that their EU obermeisters will instruct the Irish to do it.
The way is now obvious. The obstructionists in our Parliament need to lay off and allow the government to face the EU down. The Backstop was a serious strategic error on the EU’s part, borne out of their obsession with ideological purity, and if they come under sufficient pressure they will drop it. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-46961982 |
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While I'm still here, here's 2 links that some may find interesting ;)
from 2016 https://www.cer.eu/insights/eu-army-...ill-not-happen from 2019 https://www.rte.ie/news/brexit/2019/...B0Ojl6_kSZm9gY |
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32.53 million people in work in this country contribute to millions of benefit claimants on Jobseekers, ESA, Universal Credit and PIP. That's the way the system works. I don't shop in Eastern European shops - I can't comment on the content. It's quite irrelevant though. Some items will attract VAT, the shopkeeper will pay income tax, employ other people (again, paying tax and national insurance) -all of which are positives. Do you buy entirely British produce? Drive a British manufactured car? Or like everyone else do you buy whatever is cheapest? |
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Where has the money that is spent in the shops come from? Public borrowing. Where do the profits end up, ie which country? From 2011. Quote:
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