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Topic: Fuel prices are down since Brexit (Read 1397 times)

legendary
Activity: 3052
Merit: 1047
Your country may be your worst enemy
June 29, 2016, 06:46:23 PM
#35
Fuel prices are also down in most of the € zone. Oil is a market all by its own. European politics do not move it. People aren't going to drive less because of brexit.
legendary
Activity: 3122
Merit: 1389
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June 29, 2016, 03:18:06 PM
#34
This isn't related to the brexit. The £/$ exchange rate, which has changed because of the brexit, will reverse that in a few days. There's always a delay...
But what is it related to then?
legendary
Activity: 3766
Merit: 1368
June 29, 2016, 01:24:06 PM
#33
But all of a sudden fuel prices seem to be jumping right back up, higher than they were, and fast, too.

Cool
legendary
Activity: 2688
Merit: 2444
https://JetCash.com
June 27, 2016, 05:45:14 AM
#32
Banking shares are continuing to slide, so maybe any QE will be for the people, and not for the bankers
sr. member
Activity: 350
Merit: 250
June 27, 2016, 05:33:37 AM
#31
Now this surprised me - I was expecting a period of increased prices until the situation stabilised. I've just filled up with diesel fuel, and the price is down by 4p per litre. It looks as if the benefits from Brexit are arriving already. Smiley



Well that is good news...
legendary
Activity: 2688
Merit: 2444
https://JetCash.com
June 27, 2016, 05:21:14 AM
#30
Actually the picture is worse than the one you paint Popcorn.

Brexit is just the start, We need to get rid of banksters, venal politicians, and bleeding heart do-gooders. That way we may be able to grow and avoid being sucked into TTIP.
legendary
Activity: 1218
Merit: 1027
June 26, 2016, 11:31:00 PM
#29
Oh, "not that simple"? Well your first BS argument seemed pretty simple though. "Leaving EU will drop gas price" Roll Eyes

First: yeah and so what?
Second: you're talking about tax burden of UK, which is the ONLY argument of leavers. If you can't understand that freedom of trade and European cooperation on research and education is worth the 200 pounds per capita that it costs, you don't deserve it.

Do you think that the only negative aspect of the European Union membership was the £200 per capita cost? No. The direct EU funding from UK is the least of the worries. There are more serious issues. The wages for blue collar jobs in the United Kingdom has dropped steadily for the past decade or so, due to the influx of Poles and Lithuanians. Also, house prices and rentals have soared in most of the cities, resulting in a large part of the native British unable to afford simple housing.


There exist minimum wage in the UK. What you say is not possible. (Wage dumping)
Also London was the financial metropole of europe - obviously hni were buying everything there and that was the reason for such high housing prices in london.

There is a minimum wage THIS IS HOW MINIMUM IT IS..YOU EARN NOTHING NO MONEY..
right when you claim job seekers if you don't find a job in a certain amount of time you have to do work experience..Which means you work for nothing in a shop or charity shop you get no money just the experience Cheesy Cheesy..Cheeky..Now what happens is all the young adults on these schemes are hoping they get kept on ..BUT they don't because the boss knows if he gets rid he can get more free workers..but while all the time your working for free..the government says that the unemployment rate is down when in fact there is a lot working for free..
And what i mean for free is they get there dole money only and if they don't show up they get there dole cut..so the government says 5% unemployed when it's more like 15% the rest working for free getting the dole for it..

SO YOUR RIGHT THE BARE MINIMUM WAGE.....FUCK ALL Grin Grin

Years ago i left school at 16 had to do a YTS Youth training scheme..24 pounds a week 1988 to 1990
then they run out of money and shut the place down so i ended up with no skills..
then i done a ET extra training course ..Yes i know government making all these shit courses for the poor ..10 pounds added on my dole so i was on 40 pounds a week painting nunneries churches youth clubs all for 10 pounds to get skills..So i done my bit for GOD Cheesy Cheesy
not like BADECKER JUST TALKS ..When i give my sweat and hard labour for god..YER i don't believe in god but just incase remeber the churches i painted Cheesy Cheesy Cheesy
back to the point is the government uses the poor and pretends to the public well there is only 5%
unemployment when in fact there is well more..So the politician looks like he is doing a good job..
SO HE CAN STAY IN AND HIM AND HIS FRIENDS CAN ROB MORE TAXES OF THE PEOPLE..
I.E contracts to friends laws in business to help a friend..Then they get the back handers
And while all along the public think he doing good when in fact he is a fucking thief..

120K FOR A HELL FIRE MISSILE ..Now go and have a look at one i reckon cost 30k at max but he charges 120k to the tax payer and his friend gives him a cut because i am the leader and i say we need 50 hell fire missiles today and maybe more tomorrow..

WHEN WILL WE GET A LEADER WHO IS NOT A THIEF...WHEN WHEN WHEN WHEN..
I SAY WE NEVER WILL..WHEN THEY SEE THE CHANCES OF GOLD MOST HUMANS WILL TAKE IT UP ..

SO WE NEED TO TAKE MONEY OUT OF POLITICS SOMEHOW..
Someone who is happy with 150k a year job..GOING TO BE HARD TO FIND SOMEONE LIKE THIS..
Maybe one day..

Also remember this if a poor man robs a home he hurts 1 family or fiddles 40 pounds in benefits..
When a leader robs millions billions they hurt thousands millions of families..
SO WHO IS THE WORST PERSON?..NO BUT THE POOR GUY BE CALLED A SCUM LOW LIFE.
THE POLITICIAN IS CALLED A GOOD LEADER...
legendary
Activity: 3654
Merit: 1217
June 26, 2016, 10:56:33 PM
#28
One of the good side that UK exited the European Union.  I thought that the price of oil will goes up.  Let us wait for another days, weeks, or months what would be the effect of the brexit.

Everyone expected the prices to go up. The United Kingdom imports a large part of its crude and refined products from abroad (esp. Norway), and as the GBP weakens against the USD, the price of crude and gasoline will go up. However, despite a sharp 10% drop in the GBP/USD exchange rate after the results came out, the GBP stabilized to the pre-referendum rates in a few days.
sr. member
Activity: 336
Merit: 250
June 26, 2016, 06:31:30 PM
#27
One of the good side that UK exited the European Union.  I thought that the price of oil will goes up.  Let us wait for another days, weeks, or months what would be the effect of the brexit.
legendary
Activity: 1344
Merit: 1251
June 26, 2016, 12:07:41 PM
#26
Oh, "not that simple"? Well your first BS argument seemed pretty simple though. "Leaving EU will drop gas price" Roll Eyes

First: yeah and so what?
Second: you're talking about tax burden of UK, which is the ONLY argument of leavers. If you can't understand that freedom of trade and European cooperation on research and education is worth the 200 pounds per capita that it costs, you don't deserve it.

Do you think that the only negative aspect of the European Union membership was the £200 per capita cost? No. The direct EU funding from UK is the least of the worries. There are more serious issues. The wages for blue collar jobs in the United Kingdom has dropped steadily for the past decade or so, due to the influx of Poles and Lithuanians. Also, house prices and rentals have soared in most of the cities, resulting in a large part of the native British unable to afford simple housing.

Which could be resolved much more easily with a real Work Law project.
Wouldn't it be easier and better for everyone to ask for a decent rising minimum wage?
The drop of wages for blue collar has nothing to do with the EU! It's only the result of the horrible policies of England concerning "freedom market" and their very American obsession of deregulation. Of course Poles and Lithuanians become a problem once you destroyed the work contract and allowed companies to sign a working contract saying "ok I don't know if I'll have work for you but you don't have the right to work anywhere else and I'll pay you only the hours worked. Maybe it will be 60 maybe 0, who knows?"

But as any kind of social work or regulation is seen as evil you've got a true free market because you're too dumb to remember what happened to the peasants in USA. Read the grapes of wrath of Steinbeck, maybe you'll see where the real problem is!
legendary
Activity: 2464
Merit: 1145
June 26, 2016, 12:05:09 PM
#25
Oh, "not that simple"? Well your first BS argument seemed pretty simple though. "Leaving EU will drop gas price" Roll Eyes

First: yeah and so what?
Second: you're talking about tax burden of UK, which is the ONLY argument of leavers. If you can't understand that freedom of trade and European cooperation on research and education is worth the 200 pounds per capita that it costs, you don't deserve it.

Do you think that the only negative aspect of the European Union membership was the £200 per capita cost? No. The direct EU funding from UK is the least of the worries. There are more serious issues. The wages for blue collar jobs in the United Kingdom has dropped steadily for the past decade or so, due to the influx of Poles and Lithuanians. Also, house prices and rentals have soared in most of the cities, resulting in a large part of the native British unable to afford simple housing.


There exist minimum wage in the UK. What you say is not possible. (Wage dumping)
Also London was the financial metropole of europe - obviously hni were buying everything there and that was the reason for such high housing prices in london.
legendary
Activity: 3654
Merit: 1217
June 26, 2016, 11:40:34 AM
#24
Oh, "not that simple"? Well your first BS argument seemed pretty simple though. "Leaving EU will drop gas price" Roll Eyes

First: yeah and so what?
Second: you're talking about tax burden of UK, which is the ONLY argument of leavers. If you can't understand that freedom of trade and European cooperation on research and education is worth the 200 pounds per capita that it costs, you don't deserve it.

Do you think that the only negative aspect of the European Union membership was the £200 per capita cost? No. The direct EU funding from UK is the least of the worries. There are more serious issues. The wages for blue collar jobs in the United Kingdom has dropped steadily for the past decade or so, due to the influx of Poles and Lithuanians. Also, house prices and rentals have soared in most of the cities, resulting in a large part of the native British unable to afford simple housing.
legendary
Activity: 1344
Merit: 1251
June 26, 2016, 10:46:08 AM
#23
In the long term, the prices will go down. The pre-tax price of gasoline in the UK is around £0.324 per litre. After taxes, it rises to £1.08. This means that around 70% of the price is made up of taxes, a significant part of them due to the European Union. Once the EU membership is cancelled, the tax burden will be reduced and the prices will go down.

Totally false. This is the kind of BS that makes people actually believe leaving EU is good...

The minimum taxation of oil is fixed by EU, mainly in order to reduce its consumption. But the UK and ONLY the UK keeps the money from this taxation. And we can't really say government can afford reducing its incomes when you see its commercial or financial balance...

Not that simple.

First, the EU has kept the minimum tax at extremely high levels. That is why gasoline in the UK costs almost three times as much of that in the United States.

And secondly, although the UK keeps the tax money, they need to donate tens of billions of UKP every year to the European Union.  

Another lie.
 
We have very high national oil taxes in germany but still are like 20-30 cents cheaper the in the UK.
Go east europe and you have even more cheap.

Here in germany people say liers have short legs. Bryant must be a dwarf for sure.



Yeah but everyone knows that Germoney controls EU! You're just part of a conspiracy, nothing to do with the fact that oil taxation is an important revenu for UK government and that it's not the fault of EU xD
legendary
Activity: 2464
Merit: 1145
June 26, 2016, 10:36:28 AM
#22
In the long term, the prices will go down. The pre-tax price of gasoline in the UK is around £0.324 per litre. After taxes, it rises to £1.08. This means that around 70% of the price is made up of taxes, a significant part of them due to the European Union. Once the EU membership is cancelled, the tax burden will be reduced and the prices will go down.

Totally false. This is the kind of BS that makes people actually believe leaving EU is good...

The minimum taxation of oil is fixed by EU, mainly in order to reduce its consumption. But the UK and ONLY the UK keeps the money from this taxation. And we can't really say government can afford reducing its incomes when you see its commercial or financial balance...

Not that simple.

First, the EU has kept the minimum tax at extremely high levels. That is why gasoline in the UK costs almost three times as much of that in the United States.

And secondly, although the UK keeps the tax money, they need to donate tens of billions of UKP every year to the European Union.  

Another lie.
 
We have very high national oil taxes in germany but still are like 20-30 cents cheaper the like in the UK.
Go east europe and you have even more cheap.

Here in germany people say liers have short legs. Bryant must be a dwarf for sure.

legendary
Activity: 1344
Merit: 1251
June 26, 2016, 10:30:59 AM
#21
In the long term, the prices will go down. The pre-tax price of gasoline in the UK is around £0.324 per litre. After taxes, it rises to £1.08. This means that around 70% of the price is made up of taxes, a significant part of them due to the European Union. Once the EU membership is cancelled, the tax burden will be reduced and the prices will go down.

Totally false. This is the kind of BS that makes people actually believe leaving EU is good...

The minimum taxation of oil is fixed by EU, mainly in order to reduce its consumption. But the UK and ONLY the UK keeps the money from this taxation. And we can't really say government can afford reducing its incomes when you see its commercial or financial balance...

Not that simple.

First, the EU has kept the minimum tax at extremely high levels. That is why gasoline in the UK costs almost three times as much of that in the United States.

And secondly, although the UK keeps the tax money, they need to donate tens of billions of UKP every year to the European Union.  

Oh, "not that simple"? Well your first BS argument seemed pretty simple though. "Leaving EU will drop gas price" Roll Eyes

First: yeah and so what?
Second: you're talking about tax burden of UK, which is the ONLY argument of leavers. If you can't understand that freedom of trade and European cooperation on research and education is worth the 200 pounds per capita that it costs, you don't deserve it.
legendary
Activity: 3654
Merit: 1217
June 26, 2016, 10:07:00 AM
#20
In the long term, the prices will go down. The pre-tax price of gasoline in the UK is around £0.324 per litre. After taxes, it rises to £1.08. This means that around 70% of the price is made up of taxes, a significant part of them due to the European Union. Once the EU membership is cancelled, the tax burden will be reduced and the prices will go down.

Totally false. This is the kind of BS that makes people actually believe leaving EU is good...

The minimum taxation of oil is fixed by EU, mainly in order to reduce its consumption. But the UK and ONLY the UK keeps the money from this taxation. And we can't really say government can afford reducing its incomes when you see its commercial or financial balance...

Not that simple.

First, the EU has kept the minimum tax at extremely high levels. That is why gasoline in the UK costs almost three times as much of that in the United States.

And secondly, although the UK keeps the tax money, they need to donate tens of billions of UKP every year to the European Union.  
legendary
Activity: 2464
Merit: 1145
June 26, 2016, 09:20:40 AM
#19
http://www.express.co.uk/finance/city/683140/Brexit-what-will-happen-to-house-prices-when-Britain-leaves-EU-referendum-2016-property

Housing prices are dropping in the UK, this actually affects me, housing prices will be cheaper so it will be easier to find a place once I earn some real money!

I think actually that guy is a huge troll.
legendary
Activity: 1344
Merit: 1251
June 26, 2016, 06:02:27 AM
#18
In the long term, the prices will go down. The pre-tax price of gasoline in the UK is around £0.324 per litre. After taxes, it rises to £1.08. This means that around 70% of the price is made up of taxes, a significant part of them due to the European Union. Once the EU membership is cancelled, the tax burden will be reduced and the prices will go down.

Totally false. This is the kind of BS that makes people actually believe leaving EU is good...

The minimum taxation of oil is fixed by EU, mainly in order to reduce its consumption. But the UK and ONLY the UK keeps the money from this taxation. And we can't really say government can afford reducing its incomes when you see its commercial or financial balance...
legendary
Activity: 3654
Merit: 1217
June 26, 2016, 12:24:21 AM
#17
In the long term, the prices will go down. The pre-tax price of gasoline in the UK is around £0.324 per litre. After taxes, it rises to £1.08. This means that around 70% of the price is made up of taxes, a significant part of them due to the European Union. Once the EU membership is cancelled, the tax burden will be reduced and the prices will go down.
member
Activity: 96
Merit: 10
June 25, 2016, 08:18:30 PM
#16
Maybe the War is since then a little more direct. Without any Fun since GB leaved the EU?
Maybe this are also reactions over the Fraking still..could be  what do you think?
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