Richard_C
Established Member
Responding to a few things here.
What would the Germans think about supporting poorer nations? When the wall came down - 1989 - Germany introduced a reunification tax, I think it was about 2% on tax rates for 10 years, with wide public support because people could see the moral and economic argument for investing. All of the former Eastern Bloc countries have had EU support and increasingly are growing their economies. The Polish workers who went to other EU countries 10 years ago can now stay at home and enjoy a reasonable standard of living. Migration control is being achieved not by blocking migration but by making it unnecessary. Its a long term project, its working.
European democracy does work. To get things done you need agreement from 3 bodies, the Commission who make it happen, the Parliament who approve and/or make the laws (and sometimes surprise the Commission) and the Council which has representatives of every members state. We elect the MEP s and indirectly elect our Government which sends representatives to Council. It is big and sometimes cumbersome and needs consensus to work, which tends to weed out madness. I vote for an MP, I don't vote for a Prime Minister or any other Minister. I find it hard to see a Democratic deficit in the EU. I am 1/250th of the electorate for my Parish Council, they might be interested in what I think, then up through the layers to District and County Council, Parliament and finally 500 million EU voters, at leach step my views count less and I'm less likely to get what I want but it is still democratic. Democracy, the worst system we have until you look at all the others.
Yes there was and still is a level of corruption in the EU. Remember T Dan Smith and Poulson? Jonathan Aitken? It's everywhere, a good organisation recognises it and deals with it one bite at time knowing that it is ever present. Its not a reason to leave an organisation.
Now to 'mission creep' of the EU. If you want real open borders and a single market you have to have rules on consumer protection, safety standards, origin and so on or you open up to cheap unprincipled manufacturers. Then you have to think about other rules, like not making products in government run labour camps housing political prisoners, or giving your citizens the right to access a common legal system for commercial disputes (ECJ) or the ECHR to enforce their personal rights. So yes, you get more and more common rules. I bet though that the disabled children chained in filthy conditions in Ceaucescus Romania aren't complaining about EU interference, and I believe the EU has a moral duty to all of its citizens. It has quietly achieved more in the last 25 years than the UK alone ever could. Negotiators complained of the EU being 'idealistic' - of course it was, the EU is based on ideology, one that we helped form. Without ideology its just a great big supermarket.
Anyway, back to practicalities. If you want to buy anything from the EU and be sure what customs duty will be applied, you can look here for help on the relevant codes:
www.gov.uk/guidance/finding-commodity-codes-for-imports-or-exports
As this is a UK Workshop forum, have a look at wood: Here's a tiny extract
Roughly trimmed wood which is used for making walking-sticks, umbrellas, tool handles and similar products is not classified under heading code 4403. Instead it’s classified under heading code 4404
Don't confuse that with 4403 which includes among many other things wood to make smoking pipes. I guess if you want to make your walking stick and a pipe out of the same piece you need a mixed consignment declaration
And here for the duty for that code:
www.gov.uk/trade-tariff
Which handily for this is just the 20% VAT. As is most wood from the EU, but you still have to find the code and declare it.
Easy, don't forget to add on the carrier's handling charge.
Grrrrrr
What would the Germans think about supporting poorer nations? When the wall came down - 1989 - Germany introduced a reunification tax, I think it was about 2% on tax rates for 10 years, with wide public support because people could see the moral and economic argument for investing. All of the former Eastern Bloc countries have had EU support and increasingly are growing their economies. The Polish workers who went to other EU countries 10 years ago can now stay at home and enjoy a reasonable standard of living. Migration control is being achieved not by blocking migration but by making it unnecessary. Its a long term project, its working.
European democracy does work. To get things done you need agreement from 3 bodies, the Commission who make it happen, the Parliament who approve and/or make the laws (and sometimes surprise the Commission) and the Council which has representatives of every members state. We elect the MEP s and indirectly elect our Government which sends representatives to Council. It is big and sometimes cumbersome and needs consensus to work, which tends to weed out madness. I vote for an MP, I don't vote for a Prime Minister or any other Minister. I find it hard to see a Democratic deficit in the EU. I am 1/250th of the electorate for my Parish Council, they might be interested in what I think, then up through the layers to District and County Council, Parliament and finally 500 million EU voters, at leach step my views count less and I'm less likely to get what I want but it is still democratic. Democracy, the worst system we have until you look at all the others.
Yes there was and still is a level of corruption in the EU. Remember T Dan Smith and Poulson? Jonathan Aitken? It's everywhere, a good organisation recognises it and deals with it one bite at time knowing that it is ever present. Its not a reason to leave an organisation.
Now to 'mission creep' of the EU. If you want real open borders and a single market you have to have rules on consumer protection, safety standards, origin and so on or you open up to cheap unprincipled manufacturers. Then you have to think about other rules, like not making products in government run labour camps housing political prisoners, or giving your citizens the right to access a common legal system for commercial disputes (ECJ) or the ECHR to enforce their personal rights. So yes, you get more and more common rules. I bet though that the disabled children chained in filthy conditions in Ceaucescus Romania aren't complaining about EU interference, and I believe the EU has a moral duty to all of its citizens. It has quietly achieved more in the last 25 years than the UK alone ever could. Negotiators complained of the EU being 'idealistic' - of course it was, the EU is based on ideology, one that we helped form. Without ideology its just a great big supermarket.
Anyway, back to practicalities. If you want to buy anything from the EU and be sure what customs duty will be applied, you can look here for help on the relevant codes:
www.gov.uk/guidance/finding-commodity-codes-for-imports-or-exports
As this is a UK Workshop forum, have a look at wood: Here's a tiny extract
Roughly trimmed wood which is used for making walking-sticks, umbrellas, tool handles and similar products is not classified under heading code 4403. Instead it’s classified under heading code 4404
Don't confuse that with 4403 which includes among many other things wood to make smoking pipes. I guess if you want to make your walking stick and a pipe out of the same piece you need a mixed consignment declaration
And here for the duty for that code:
www.gov.uk/trade-tariff
Which handily for this is just the 20% VAT. As is most wood from the EU, but you still have to find the code and declare it.
Easy, don't forget to add on the carrier's handling charge.
Grrrrrr