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The mkiv Supra Owners Club

What the hell happened to the £/euro?


fastisnice

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its all part of a deal the european union have with GB. all of us know how much the european union has been on our case to become part of them! for ages now! so as they know about our great financial case there getting involved very nicely, releaving us of our money pains and in return we happily accept all eu laws etc. tax, life as you know it.

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its all part of a deal the european union have with GB. all of us know how much the european union has been on our case to become part of them! for ages now! so as they know about our great financial case there getting involved very nicely, releaving us of our money pains and in return we happily accept all eu laws etc. tax, life as you know it.

 

 

We're doomed Mr Mainwaring! :shock:

 

Maybe I'll start learning Greek ;)

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We are going to have the Euro in the UK by 2011, my crystal ball told me :)

 

Gaz.

 

Seriously??

Just a question for clever people lol, how much will we get paid when we join the euro? Lets assume someone is getting paid £2000 a month, how much will that person get paid after we join the euro in euro off course???? i've always been curious about this one

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Seriously??

Just a question for clever people lol, how much will we get paid when we join the euro? Lets assume someone is getting paid £2000 a month, how much will that person get paid after we join the euro in euro off course???? i've always been curious about this one

 

 

€2000 ? Maybe :)

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Broadly speaking, right now everyone of the key currency holders (USA, UK, Euro, Japan) are all in the same boat; we're facing tough times. So give or take a bit, all our currencies should be devaluing, but if everyone faces that, things basically stay the same (if you and I jump out of a plane, we're both going to hit the floor, but relative to each otehr we're not moving).

 

So, the main affector in all of this is base rates.

 

If BoE base rate drop > Rest of World Base Rate Drop

then GB£ drop relative to rest of world.

 

 

Expect alsmost everything you buy to go up in price as it's almost all imported and if your'e paid in £, it effectively costs more as the £ is worth less.

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Broadly speaking, right now everyone of the key currency holders (USA, UK, Euro, Japan) are all in the same boat; we're facing tough times. So give or take a bit, all our currencies should be devaluing, but if everyone faces that, things basically stay the same (if you and I jump out of a plane, we're both going to hit the floor, but relative to each otehr we're not moving).

 

So, the main affector in all of this is base rates.

 

If BoE base rate drop > Rest of World Base Rate Drop

then GB£ drop relative to rest of world.

 

 

Expect alsmost everything you buy to go up in price as it's almost all imported and if your'e paid in £, it effectively costs more as the £ is worth less.

 

 

I still remember how nice it was when i was on hoildays and 2000£ was 3000euro.:(

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Expect alsmost everything you buy to go up in price as it's almost all imported and if your'e paid in £, it effectively costs more as the £ is worth less.

 

This does have the overall effect that people have to start spending more income on imported necessities, like food, heating, etc., rather than being able to splash out 75% of their income on overpriced housing.

 

That's how things used to be back in the 70's before housing prices and lifestyle expectations spiralled out of control......so it could easily be argued that things are supposed to be like that, and maybe this shift is just a reality check and a realignment of peoples priorities rather than a total collapse?

 

:cool:

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Everybody is in the same boat indeed (GBP, EUR, YEN, USD) etc. But the problem is that the UK is isolated and has not much to offer since all its eggs were in the financial services basket. They've clearly excluded themselves from the rest because they though they knew better (and that counts for other things aswell, call it Imperial heritage)...

 

This is not an EU plan to get the UK in the euro zone, it's the UK that has always wanted to do things their own way. So be it. If the pound slides even more they will be forced to adopt the stronger currency which is the Euro and there's nothing wrong with that, it's just a different name and different coloured paper to pay for goods.

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