Quote:
Originally Posted by Itse
It's discussed in that article. As said, pretty much every economist agrees that they should be OK.
It's not like Scotland is voting on starting a civil war. Most things will be as they are now until they are changed, which will take time. It's going be at least a decade before things start to look significantly different. And since stability is in the interest of all business, I don't see the UK government creating that much trouble either. After all, both sides will have CEO's to answer to, and all the CEO's will want everything to go as smoothly and uneventfully as possible, because business.
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A decade? Your joking arnt you, within 2 years Scotland's out of the EU, has no currency or central bank, will have lost the right of free movement and will have tariffs imposed on their exports across the UK and Europe.
The cost of establishing its own currency will devastate public spending in the country.
Incidently CEO's could care less about Scotland, it's a tiny market that will have to sell its oil anyway.