Brexit: UK votes to leave the EU: What happens next?JonesDay
British Prime Minister Theresa May returns to the House of Commons on March 12 for a crunch vote that could dramatically alter the Brexit process. May has been trying to negotiate changes to her Brexit deal, especially the controversial backstop plan, which was drawn up to prevent the return o...
While rational choice theory is logical and easy to understand, it is often contradicted in the real world. For example, political factions that were in favor of the Brexit vote, held on June 23, 2016, used promotional campaigns that were based on emotion rather than rational analysis.5These ...
As some European diplomats acknowledge, had the vote gone the way of Madame Le Pen then the very existence of the European Union, without one of its anchors, would have been in doubt. The notion that Brexit could cause the collapse of the European Union is now off the table. ...
Brexit 'could go quite badly' - Carney Before reports of eurosceptic anger, this was seen as giving Mrs May a bit of breathing space and turning today's proceedings into something of a damp squib. That may not be the case now.
However, the job market has been robust – unemployment currently stands at its lowest point since the 1970s – and wage growth has been strong. Moreover, the election was won on a platform of fiscal stimulus, in addition to the promise to deliver Brexit. This additional spending should comb...
Assuming that the UK does not ratify the UPC Agreement, the system could not start until the UK was actually no longer an EU Member (unless the UPC Agreement is amended). This is because Article 89 (1) provides: “This Agreement shall enter into force … on the first day of the fourth...
CASE STUDY 1: BREXIT VOTE IMPACT A situation whereby an investor has one thousand shares in a UK-based multinational firm whose each share trades at £20 before the Brexit vote of 2016. They assign a limit price to their stocks at £18, which is 10% below the prevailing price. Conseq...
In the wake of the Brexit vote and the election of President Trump, the experts and commentators whose ideas shape the ideas of others have tried to pinpoint the cause of the populist fervor that upended many expectations. In op-eds and books (seeThe Death of Expertise) the consensus seems...
The delays, the dangers and the constant bickering are now – just two months before Britain is due to leave – prompting some who voted for Brexit to change their minds, opinion polls suggest. Remember all those Brits Googling “What is Brexit?” the day after they voted for it?