Debates between James Cartlidge and Nick Clegg during the 2015-2017 Parliament

EU Membership: Economic Benefits

Debate between James Cartlidge and Nick Clegg
Wednesday 15th June 2016

(8 years, 5 months ago)

Commons Chamber
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Nick Clegg Portrait Mr Clegg
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I will, if I may, make a little progress.

The second point, which is completely omitted by the analysis of Brexit campaigners, is our current account deficit. To be fair, the Government are very silent on that as well, for the very good reason that it is shockingly large. We now have a current account deficit which, at 7% of GDP, is historically and internationally very high and, in my view, unsustainable by historical standards in the long run. As the Governor of the Bank of England has said, if a country runs such a huge, unprecedented current deficit, it has to rely, as he put it, on the “kindness of strangers”.

James Cartlidge Portrait James Cartlidge
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Will the right hon. Gentleman give way?

Nick Clegg Portrait Mr Clegg
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If I may finish this point, I will then give way.

The only way in which that current account deficit is sustainable is if strangers from elsewhere in the world invest in assets in this country—in property, infrastructure, the financial services sector, factories and companies. It is on those investors, and on the kindness of those strangers, as Mark Carney has said, that the sustainability of the ballooning current account deficit relies. What will those strangers think after next Thursday, when they do not even know whether our country will survive at all? The United Kingdom may not persist because Scotland may trigger a second referendum, and see the United Kingdom fall.