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Mike Lander Mike Lander is offline
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Default How long does it take a locksmith to open a van withkeys locked inside?

Tim Streater wrote:
In article , Adrian
wrote:

On Mon, 04 Jan 2016 16:23:03 +0000, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:

It remains a fact that most would expect a company trading in the UK to
pay UK taxes


Which just shows how little most people understand the modern global
world.

"A company trading in the UK" might be a UK company - or it might be a
German company or a French company or wherever. If they're in the EU,
then that means that they'll be paying corptax in the country they book
their profits in. Free movement of capital, free movement of goods, free
movement of services - three of the four basic tenets of the 1957 Treaty
of Rome, along with free movement of people.

A non-EU company trading in the EU would typically have an EU subsidiary,
which would trade with the parent - and it would be the profits of that
subsidiary which would be taxed wherever.

A non-EU company who only do a small amount of trade here would be
subject to all sorts of import duties and VAT paperwork, which would make
trading here very expensive.


OK so far.

If ever the UK is ****ing stupid enough to leave the EU and not remain
within EEA or EFTA or some similar free-trade network, then UK businesses
will be non-EU businesses for the other EU/EEA/EFTA markets. And if we
stay within EEA/EFTA, there's absolutely no point in leaving the EU.


Erm, yes there is. The clue is in the name. That is "European *Union*"
vs. "European *Free* *Trade* *Area*". We didn't sign up to, and don't
want, "ever closer union".


Time will tell on that don't want claim. Bet the majority vote to stay in
the EU.

And lets not have any twaddle about how Norway has to implement all the
EU rules anyway. It may have to in order to access the Common Market,


No they do not.

but that's another story.