Why is Switzerland so economically strong despite not being part of the European Union?
Does this mean that the United Kingdom will be able to survive without being a part of the European union?
>>61411404
literally jews
>>61411404
They're literally dwarfs that have gold hoards hidden in their mountain forts
>>61411404
>posting inaccurate EU borders
1. Protestant mentality to the max
2. Economic freedom and low taxes
3. Banking
>Does this mean that the United Kingdom will be able to survive without being a part of the European union?
Yes
>>61411404
Jew gold + jews
Maybe
>>61411404
Switzerland pays money into the EU budget and has to allow EU migrants and apply EU regulations in order to gain access to the single market.
If the UK copies Switzerland the Leave voters would have to break all their promises and end up in the same situation as they were before only that they can't influence the rules they have to abide by.
>>61411727
>>61411521
no.. no.. you go away
Banks, decades of neutrality, and pocket knives.
>>61411700
>Protestant mentality
Catholicism has more followers than all shades of protestantism in Switzerland.
>>61411830
>influence
Read: Protest and see them come through anyway.
>>61411404
cheese and watch also tourism
They're in EU everywhere but on papers.
>>61412853
>With Britain outside the bloc, a number of EU and ECB reform ideas it had thwarted could regain momentum, including a single capital markets authority, a more interventionist policy on markets in general and new bank capital rules better tailored to the interests of French, German and Italian lenders. Mr Hill’s plans for a capital markets union may roll-on, but over time take a more ambitious, eurozone-centred shape.
>While it is hard to predict the form or speed of any turn against the City, Lord Hill said longstanding efforts to bring financial operations back to the euro area may be resurrected, including the European Central Bank’s plan to locate clearing services in the single currency zone.
>The move is a sign the EU is shifting its policy goals towards aligning Europe’s 28-country strong single market for finance with the interests of the smaller eurozone and its banking union, rather than allowing them to permanently coexist. It is an outcome Britain had spent 25 years fighting to avoid.
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/2b84027e-3b93-11e6-9f2c-36b487ebd80a.html#ixzz4CqfpaiEk