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 Originally Posted by OngBonga
Corporations lobby government, and government yields because lawmakers tend to be corrupt. Both are to blame.
Back in the 90s, Microsoft didn't lobby. They stayed out of government and wanted the government to stay out of their business. Congress didn't like this and threw a bunch of legal and regulatory trouble at Microsoft, "encouraging" them to lobby. Microsoft lobbies like every other good dog now.
Government is the alpha in the lobby/legislation relationship. It's the one holding the guns, the legal and enforcement power, and it doesn't "yield." It holds auctions, giving its services to the highest bidder and loudest voices. This is the government being corrupt because the government is corrupt, not government being corrupted by outside influences.
Here's the thing. I'm no economist, and the vast majority of the time when I'm debating anything here, it's based on my opinion and not a lot else. I don't bother to research things I say here, I rarely educate myself on economic matters because it's pretty much a waste of my time... it will only help me to engage better in debate with you! But this referendum, I feel a sense of obligation to educate myself, especially when it comes to economic matters, because I've kind of just been shrugging my shoulders and saying "whatever, sovereignty is more important", which was basically a cop out, another way of saying "I'll be fucked if I know what's going to happen to the economy". So I've been digging a little bit.
What stuck me as particularly interesting is that after WWII, The UK economy was particularly sluggish (we were still rationing for years), while the German economy went through such a boom that they became the third biggest economy in the world. Hang on, didn't we win the war? How the fuck did that happen? We borrowed money off you lot to get out of the shit, but Germany was much more damaged, and they had war repatriations to worry about too. They were much more indebted than we were, and had more rebuilding of infrastructure.
Guess who was deregulating, and guess who wasn't.
I then took a look at Switzerland, where Zurich is the city with the highest standard of living in the world. Their economy is insanely successful. Yep, it's one of the least regulated economies on the planet.
I then realised that the EU's economic growth is behind every other continent on the planet. The EU, of course, is heavily regulated.
I'm happy that I can now economically justify an "out" vote, I can stop shrugging my shoulders in ignorance.
Good stuff.
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