I like that. Sums up the referendum.You trust them this time because their random guesswork happens to coincide with your random guesswork in this instance.
Vote for one only:
This random guesswork -
That random guesswork -

I like that. Sums up the referendum.You trust them this time because their random guesswork happens to coincide with your random guesswork in this instance.

Why would the IMF be more likely to predict the future than a pub landlord?I think Gerry's favourite pub landlord carries less conviction than the IMF.
That's another good endoresement to Leave: The IMF didn't predict a recession, they simply started with that as an assumption and then tried to work out how big such a recession might be. And with all the expertise John says they have, and their pro-EU bias, all they came up with was either a small recession, or one so small that it barely even met the definition of recession.If you think Gerry's pub landlord understands exchange rates, currencies, international trade and banking better than the IMF, good luck to you.

Nobody knows what is going to happen to the economy if we leave,


Norway is a rich oil economy, as you know.
Switzerland has the advantage of being able to keep money deposited in its banks by gangsters, dictators and refugees who for one reason or another don't live to collect it.
The UK has a very large and profitable services sector and makes a lot of money from being in the single market and selling financial services in conformance with EU regulations and obeying EU laws. There are also some car factories, such as foreign-owned Mini, foreign-owned Ford, foreign-owned Jaguar, foreign-owned Toyota, foreign-owned Peugeot and foreign-owned Rolls-Royce. They all find it cheap and easy to export their goods into Europe because they are made inside the EU Single Market. There is no shortage of other countries with educated workforces, inside the EU, eager to accept any future investment. As for Spending Power and Size of Economy, we will not find any market capable of substituting for the EU. Don't make the mistake of thinking that the 10% they export to us outweighs the 40% we export to them. Who needs whom?
As you know, the UK is one of the largest EU nations, which is why it has a strong voice in the conference room and the voting chamber, which enable it to guide regulations to our advantage. Both of which it will lose if it resigns.
Norway is a rich oil economy, as you know.
Switzerland has the advantage of being able to keep money deposited in its banks by gangsters, dictators and refugees who for one reason or another don't live to collect it.
The UK has a very large and profitable services sector and makes a lot of money from being in the single market and selling financial services in conformance with EU regulations and obeying EU laws. There are also some car factories, such as foreign-owned Mini, foreign-owned Ford, foreign-owned Jaguar, foreign-owned Toyota, foreign-owned Peugeot and foreign-owned Rolls-Royce. They all find it cheap and easy to export their goods into Europe because they are made inside the EU Single Market. There is no shortage of other countries with educated workforces, inside the EU, eager to accept any future investment. As for Spending Power and Size of Economy, we will not find any market capable of substituting for the EU. Don't make the mistake of thinking that the 10% they export to us outweighs the 40% we export to them. Who needs whom?
As you know, the UK is one of the largest EU nations, which is why it has a strong voice in the conference room and the voting chamber, which enable it to guide regulations to our advantage. Both of which it will lose if it resigns.

You couldn't make it up!