Thanks for sharing this, I found it quite fascinating.

One thing that struck me while reading this: according to this account, a
bunch of questions are now joined with the Scottish electorate that are not
ordinarily joined with any electorate: what kind of currency should we
have? what kind of banking system should we have? what model should we
adopt for encouraging investment? how should we try to protect ourselves
from global financial crises? If becoming "independent" would expose us to
greater risk of becoming Ireland or Iceland, would that really be a plus,
even on autonomy grounds, let alone economic grounds?

If having a referendum on "independence" creates an opportunity to engage
the electorate in a passionate and detailed debate about such questions,
maybe the Scots and others should have independence referenda more often.
Maybe the ideal outcome from a "robust democracy" point of view would be
for the referendum vote to be close to a tie, to maintain pressure and
tension in all directions, and ensure that these questions will soon be
revisited.








Robert Naiman
Policy Director
Just Foreign Policy
www.justforeignpolicy.org
[email protected]
(202) 448-2898 x1


On Sat, Sep 6, 2014 at 9:27 AM, Marv Gandall <[email protected]> wrote:

> Below a link to a detailed analysis by the British Marxist economist
> Michael Roberts of the economic challenges which would face an independent
> Scotland if it votes to secede from the UK on September 18th.  Roberts
> concludes that "at best, the majority of the Scottish people will find
> little difference under Holyrood than under Westminster and it could be
> worse if a global crisis erupts again. Scotland as a small economy,
> dependent on multinationals for investment, still dominated by British
> banks and the City of London and without control of its own currency or
> interest rates, could face a much bigger hit than elsewhere in terms of
> incomes and unemployment."
>
> But as Roberts also notes, “the decision on independence is not just a
> question of the economy and living standards".  The political consequences
> of such a dramatic rupture with the status quo in Scotland could be far
> reaching - not only on independence struggles in Catalonia and elsewhere,
> but as encouragement to a wide range of other social movements everywhere.
>
> http://thenextrecession.wordpress.com/2014/09/04/scotland-yes-or-no/
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