So far I have not seen brexiters proved any economic benefits of leaving EU. The only point they have is that they want their country back and they don’t want to be ruled by Brussels, both of which are not true. This country has a fair share of legislators in Brussels and Brussels has not any authority on this country. This country has not approved anything, from Brussels, which was not compatible to the needs of this country on economic and cultural levels.
All leaders of industries and economies have stated that this country will lose a lot by leaving EU. Most of big businesses leave or slow down their activity in UK. This kills thousands of small businesses, which depend on these big businesses. The country loses competitive edge against EU in the world especially in China. Already we can not compete with China, so what are we going to do against Chinese low cost products after we leave EU. Bear in mind China will become another Japan in efficiency to produce low cost products against our own higher cost products. Bear in mind if we leave EU gradually labour cost goes very high because labour supply decreases a lot. Almost all the businesses will suffer from the shortage of labour. We can not also compete with EU because of EU low labour cost.
There will be shortage of unskilled workers, which prevent businesses to expand. All businesses need the support of unskilled labour, otherwise they can not expand even may not to survive. this causes the surplus of a large volume of skilled workers without work. These skilled workers without work at the end will leave the country to find work somewhere else. So you get brain-drain. At the end to protect national industry, we have to put high trade tariffs on import and create trade barriers.
All signs indicate if this country leaves EU it will become weak and isolated and may degrade to the level of the third world developing countries.
Okay, where are the economic benefits of remaining? I see no promises there at all - just blind belief that we will have more of the same. In reality the EU is the second slowest growing economy in the world after Antarctica - What do you think the chances are we wont be able to grow faster than the EU if we leave considering we are one of the countries that prop up the EU? It has youth unemployment of up to 50% and cant do anything about it.
If you dont believe Brussels has any power of UK laws, ask the people of the steel industry who cant be rescued by the government because of EU laws, or ask Osborne who cant do something as simple as removing a 5% VAT on tampons because of EU laws or this guy whose company has become uncompetitive because of EU laws
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-36148990
You need to debate with more people as there are many valid reasons why people want a brexit. They include the economy, the ability to run our own tax affairs without interference, the ability to help our own industries, democracy, un-elected leaders, immigration, security (only yesterday a military leader jumped from the remain camp to the leave camp because of the dangers of an EU army), risky trade deals (TIPP & China), handing over more sovereignty plus many more reasons. You can ignore all the issues being raised by leave supporters and boil it down to "people just wanting their country back", but you are missing the majority of the debate.
If you listen to the debates you would also find out that there numerous business leaders advocating a leave vote. James Dyson (Dyson), Lord Bamford (JCB chairman), John Mills (founder of JML), Joe Foster (Reebok), John Caudwell (Phones4U), John Timpson (Timpsons), Luke Johnson (cafe chain Patisserie Valerie), Nigel Wilson (CEO of Legal & General), Oliver Hemsley (CEO of Numis Securities), Crispin Odey, (boss of leading hedge fund Odey Asset Management), Peter Goldstein, (founder of Superdrug), Steve Dowdle (vice president Europe Sony), David Sismey (MD of Goldman Sachs), Sir Patrick Sheehy (former chairman of British American Tobacco) or you could just go through the list of 300 business leaders who signed an open letter in May to support Brexit.
You are also missing a lot of peoples issues with immigration as well. At the moment we have a totally open door policy to the other EU 27 countries. The flip side of that is we have to apply quotas and visa systems on the other 168 countries (including commonwealth countries) of the world. The quotas get smaller and the visas get tougher to get hold of as more people come in from the EU. James Dyson has said this week he has had to set up design offices abroad because it was easier than getting the talent he wanted in to the UK. Last year the NHS lost out on 2,700 fully trained nurses from non-EU countries due to quotas.
So while we are totally welcoming of 14% of the world we are becoming more and more isolated from the remaining 86% of the world when it comes to importing skills.