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David Cameron in the House of Commons yesterdaydefending his decision to veto a new EU treaty PA Wire

Column Why David Cameron made the right decision...

Those in the eurozone are facing a ‘lost decade’, writers former trader Nick Leeson – and who would want to hand over more policy-making power to the managers of that crisis?

WE WOKE YESTERDAY morning to the sight of the stock markets and the euro under downward pressure. Goldman Sachs is warning of a ‘lost decade’ and analysts at the Bank of America are warning that a possible break-up of the common currency will lead to the next Great Depression.

Wherever you turn there is very strong language describing the difficulties that we all face. Losing a decade as Goldman describes is not encouraging – we only exist on this planet for on average seven to eight decades. Losing one of those through the folly of our leaders and bankers would significantly increase the cost that we all have already paid.

Let’s hope that we are already three and a half years into that lost decade rather than at the beginning. For three and a half years now we have bounced from perceived solution to perceived solution without really getting any nearer solving the problem. Banks have been repeatedly recapitalised, many European countries have seen massive austerity packages and yet we still fail to see a light at the end of the tunnel. The difficulties that we face are spreading like the virus that they are as we now face financial, sovereign and constitutional crises.

The EU summit that concluded last week was the latest attempt at a solution but to many observers this descended into farce after David Cameron withdrew his support for the treaty.

It’s strange for me to reconcile his decision being an Englishman living in Ireland, a country which depends on the common currency. But I think that he made the right decision. If we could turn back time I’m sure that the Irish people would probably have made the same decision. I see entry into the euro as the catalyst for the problems that Ireland now face, lured in by many of the EU monies available, cheap credit very quickly became too readily available and we gorged on it. The developers – granted – more than most but we all had our fair share and there was nobody in tune enough to control the mounting debt levels.

If you were you David Cameron though and faced with that decision on Friday, would you have reacted differently? I don’t think anybody could.

The UK signing the EU treaty would have been like entering a partnership with Anglo Irish

Let’s look at the facts. Staying out of the common currency has pretty much ensured that the UK will face a less damaging recession than the rest of us. You (as Cameron) are now being asked to hand over more financial and fiscal policy to a governing organisation that has not done particularly well (and which many would say has failed spectacularly). They have continually failed to stem the crisis and rather than passing over more control, the sensible thing would be to wrest some control back.

It would be like entering a partnership with Anglo Irish or giving me the keys to the Exchequer and asking me to give them back after a day’s trading on the markets. Both would be foolish in the extreme, probably far more than that.

Unfortunately, the eurozone sovereigns remain under pressure after the lack of decisive action last week. We are warned again that after the latest raft of stress tests that some banks face another huge shortfall and quite rightly the markets continue to shun government debt and the euro. Many of the strategies proposed so far have been flawed. Banks were encouraged to buy sovereign debt to shore up their risk and bolster their capital adequacy. As their values have dropped it has done the opposite. Credibility is at an all-time low in the market and nothing is picking it off the floor. The EU now faces a possible S&P downgrade.

We continue to face very difficult decisions. There has to be pain, of that there is no doubt, the depth of the difficulties that we face means that there is no pain-free exit from this situation. The Budget here was not received well and understandably so. We are all being hit in the pocket and in support functions that we all rely on to survive but the cuts quite simply had to be made. The question is whether or not they made the cuts in the right places. Saving lives by retaining funding in the health sector or moving a roundabout in Galway ten metres to the side? I know which one I’d choose.

I’m not in favour of the ‘lost decade’ forecast by Goldman Sachs. Each time the banks are recapitalised I only see it as papering over the cracks until the next stress test. Rest assured that the bankers will not face this lost decade. They will party through the most difficult times feasting on the uncertainty and volatility in the market place. It is what they do.

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    Mute 2thFairy
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    Oct 11th 2019, 7:50 AM

    What could they have possibly come up with at the 11th hour that no one thought of before. My guess is that it will be Mays deal but with new language and the DUPs are the fall guys as they will have to try to convince the media it’s a different deal. They also need to convince their electorate that it’s a new deal because they want happy campers post Brexit and to be able to say they saved their precious union.

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    Mute Skybloo
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    Oct 11th 2019, 9:34 AM

    @Paul Furey: Boris’s paper has adopted a long awaited change of tone – interesting … looks like the Boris bus is on the way
    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2019/10/10/northern-ireland-burden-rest-uk-cant-let-get-way-brexit/

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    Mute Daimhín De Naois
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    Oct 11th 2019, 7:52 AM

    Boris was always planning a deal. It was noted in Sept by senior Tories Johnson had said he’d have no problem throwing the DUP under the bus. For that, first he needed to lose the majority, go for the no deal and flush out the patriots from the Tories, Gets rid and the majority’s gone and with that the DUP became meaningless. The blame game and erratic nonsense since wasnt for the EU’s benefit, the ridiculous offer was for Arlene Foster so she’d row in behind and lose public support in NI-job done. Unlawful actions was to throw parliment up in arms and have them aghast so when he comes back with something similar to the red line May Deal that she wouldnt put to parliment, the Labour rebels and theTories set adrift will row in behind him and suddenly he has the majority again. I think the first vote he’ll win will be that deal and the DUP are thrown away. Its the only thing that makes sense the past number of weeks. Its actually genius when you think about it a s much as I hate to say it

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    Mute Mister Gooey
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    Oct 11th 2019, 8:41 AM

    @Daimhín De Naois: the Editorial in The Daily Telegraph today reflects exactly what the Tories think of Northern Ireland within the UK – a millstone! Terrible stuff.

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    Mute Paul Furey
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    Oct 11th 2019, 9:22 AM

    @Daimhín De Naois: you’re giving the tories too much credit there.

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    Mute Michael Murray
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    Oct 11th 2019, 8:03 AM

    ….not sure the DUP see the bus coming…..

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    Mute Skybloo
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    Oct 11th 2019, 9:39 AM

    @Michael Murray: I’m sure the penny must be dropping – Boris’s newspaper, published this morning, is letting them know of the imminent arrival

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    Mute Willy Mc Bride
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    Oct 11th 2019, 7:36 AM

    Ireland and EU can and hopefully will drive a deal through . EU the ones always using Ireland as a stick to beat UK. Varadker needs to get a deal done that’s best for Ireland , not the EU. Junk the drunk and mister Barnier won’t be best pleases at Boris and Taoiseach making progress. EU don’t do democracy and will do all in their power to stop Brexit.

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    Mute bmul
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    Oct 11th 2019, 7:45 AM

    @Willy Mc Bride: poor UK been forced to leave and look for a deal oh wait there choice there lies.

    Easiest deal ever , they need us more than we need them , we can get a great deal .

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    Mute jamesdecay
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    Oct 11th 2019, 8:39 AM

    On the plus side, Johnson at least bothered to tuck his shirt in this time. He must mean business.

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    Mute Eugene Conroy
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    Oct 11th 2019, 7:48 AM

    Good conversation about socks so

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    Mute Dave Byrne
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    Oct 11th 2019, 7:56 AM

    @Eugene Conroy: Haha a sock joke so original

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    Mute Willy Mc Bride
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    Oct 11th 2019, 7:38 AM

    That’s Ireland and ‘UK’ can and hopefully will ensure a deal…

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    Mute Pat Ryan
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    Oct 11th 2019, 10:29 AM

    @Willy Mc Bride: hey Willy where’s the bus .

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    Mute Josh Hanners
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    Oct 11th 2019, 9:50 AM

    How did the DUP ever think, could get a veto on the backdrop? These are big boys games, as they are about to find out!

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    Mute TamuMassif2019
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    Oct 11th 2019, 11:08 AM
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    Mute JoyMonkey
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    Oct 11th 2019, 9:19 AM

    I hope Varadkar didn’t flinch.

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    Mute TamuMassif2019
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    Oct 11th 2019, 11:05 AM

    @JoyMonkey: When could FG ever say no to the Tory party???

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    Mute Furze
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    Oct 11th 2019, 7:52 AM

    Nothing like a good fudge?

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    Mute Alan Scott
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    Oct 11th 2019, 9:45 AM

    Veradker should make a deal with Johnson for a free trade deal

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    Mute Diarmuid Hunt
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    Oct 11th 2019, 7:44 PM

    @Alan Scott: Ah jesus come on, inform yourself.

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    Mute Big Red
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    Oct 11th 2019, 9:24 AM

    He’s now even tying his bloody tie like Trump!

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    Mute TamuMassif2019
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    Oct 11th 2019, 11:07 AM

    @Big Red: Boris gets Trump to tell Leo what to do and that is my fear… And Boris does what Trump tells him then???

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    Mute TamuMassif2019
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    Oct 11th 2019, 11:05 AM

    It’s not just an Irish border but also an EU one as well???

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    Mute Toki Wartooth
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    Oct 11th 2019, 12:21 PM

    @TamuMassif2019: In case you did not know Ireland is part of the EU – and quite happy to be a member according to latest polls. So if it would be an Irish border with a non EU country then you can call it both – Irish and EU border – no problem. What is exactly your question?

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