Lone3wolf: ...
Mind you, our Agriculture sector is far more efficient than France's, for example....and they want US to fund THEIRS by removing completely the rebate.
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Trilarion: I don't know whose agriculture is far more efficient than others, but I doubt it is the reason for the rebate. The rebate afaik is just a special discount once issued to get the UK into the boat. From the point of the view of the ones not getting the rebate kind of an unfair advantage and worth to be fought against.
But apart from that I also don't like this whole big agraric subvention scheme and would like to cut it massively. Also UK doesn't seem to do so badly. The only really surprising thing about UK economy for me: military spendings are extremely high. I would cut there too.
Military : Cut to the bone and beyond :
*reducing the planned "buy" of F-35s.
*Can't afford to keep our Eurofighters in service - spares, etc.
*Mothballing, (possibly SCRAPPING) one of the two Supercarriers we're building, even BEFORE they're finished.
-Relying on the French to supply planes and aircrew for the one we're (maybe) keeping for actual service.
-Reducing numbers of frigates and destroyers.
-We haven't had cruisers for decades.
*Selling and scrapping our normal carriers (maybe keeping 1 or 2 - again, not decided yet)
*Cutting back on Trident, and the submarines that fire them (effectively taking ourselves out of being a nuclear superpower)
*Harriers have already been "retired"
and that's just off the top of my head from news this last year - dealing with the financial crisis the last government left us with.
CAP and rebate : The CAP is often explained as the result of a political compromise between France and Germany. (Remember, the ECSC, EC and EEC (forerunners of what became the EU) was sought by France after getting their arses kicked by Germany 3 times in 80 years as a means to stop another arse-kicking, by making Europe dependant upon each other to the extent that no one nation could not attack another without incurring massive financial and political drawbacks and punishments) : -
German industry would have access to the French market; in exchange, Germany would help pay for France's farmers. Germany is still the largest net contributor into the EU budget. However, as of 2005 France is also a net contributor and the more agriculture-focused Spain, Greece and Portugal [coincidently, pretty much the 3 largest failing countries of the EU O_o] are the biggest beneficiaries.
Meanwhile, particularly urbanised member states where agriculture compromises only a very small part of the economy such as the Netherlands and the UK are much smaller beneficiaries and the CAP is often unpopular with the national governments.
France wants the rebate abolished because they gain from it - becoming a recipient of monies instead of a donater, currently.
The UK would have been contributing more money to the EU than any other EU member state, (currently Germany pays the most towards it, IIRC) except that Margaret Thatcher negotiated a special annual UK rebate in 1984. Due to the way the rebate is funded, France pays the largest share of the rebate (31%), followed by Italy (24%) and Spain (14%).
The popular view in the UK - gutter and tabloid press, anyway :P, is that if the UK rebate were reduced with no change to the CAP, then the UK would be paying money to keep an inefficient French farming sector in business – to many people in the UK, this would be seen as "grossly unfair". French motives for generating arguments about "solidarity" and "selfishness" are generally seen as extremely self-serving.
If the rebate were removed without changes to the CAP then the UK would pay a net contribution of 14 times that of the French (In 2005 EU budget terms). The UK would make a net contribution of €8.25 billion compared to the current contribution of €2.75 billion, versus a current French net contribution of €0.59 billion. And France has roughly TWICE the land area of the UK...no wonder we're pissed off about the EU, and very few of us here actually want to belong to it. Not mentioning (which I now will), they're unelected, corrupt, mendacious and worse (EU "Politicians", that is....not sole, or specific countries).
As for the UK "not doing too badly", it may appear that way on a superficial level to outsiders, but there are some mitigating factors -
We have the remnants of the Empire, and The Commonwealth of Nations (which has been very neglected since WW2 in favour of our politicians unilaterally forcing us into closer integration with Europe, despite public opinion).
We also have a £4.5+ TRILLION debt and budget deficit that the last government's policy of "spend, spend, spend, waste on cancelled projects, spend, spend, waste more and spend some more....oh no more money in the treasury? spend more! oh, we're being forced out of office in 2 days? GIVE the EU another £100 billion!" that have forced the new coalition government to make drastic, very unpopular but needed spending cuts of 20% across the board over the course of this parliament (4 years), just to service the interest payments on it :facepalm:
We should have stuck with the EFTA we setup, that places like Switzerland and Norway (? or sweden? one of them) still use to great benefit, instead of jumping into the sinking ship of EU in the 70s. :\