I predict a Tory/UKIP paradise. Fewer consumer, environmental, and worker protections, less holiday/maternity, etc. The EU was far from perfect, but I do not trust this gov't to look after anyone other than their rich buddies.Maybe not all doom and gloom, but another step away from human values and toward corporatism.
One industry that WILL have problems is higher ed. We rely on EU funding for teaching, research, community outreach, etc. ERASMUS is a nice programme too that likely ends when we leave.
You are absolutely spot on here.
Listen you folk saying "Oh it isn't so bad", "We'll muddle through" are advocating turning over this monumental period of change to people who have made no plans at all, and who have shown time and time again that they are not at all interested in the prosperity of Great Britain as a whole, but only a small segment.
This should come as no surprise. Trickle down economics, the sort they openly back and work towards, is based on allowing the top tier of society to operate unrestricted and unregulated with the unfounded hope that some of it will slosh over on the rest of us. It doesn't work that way. The wealth of the top 10% has soared while that of the bottom 50% has stagnated and retreated.
Let there be no doubt that the institutions of the EU have contributed to this terrible regressiveness. But unlike with the Tory/Blair-led regimes....there have been instances of support for families and workers. The concepts are at least not alien as they are to our current leadership, a leadership which has purposely targeted the vulnerable, the sick, the low paid and immigrants....all for some now-deserted, inane attempts at austerity.
And regarding higher-ed/research....Great Britain is not a powerful nation, its people are not stronger than others...there is no "tough" gene in their makeup. The football squad is not a powerhouse....the stuff we make is not better than the stuff other people make....British beef is fine but no better, really, than that from cows from many other nations.
What we do have, the thing that made Britain stand out (aside from suspect colonialism), is that early on the scientific method caught on. Having shrugged off the smothering blanket of the Church....Britain adopted research. And very early on Britain fostered partnerships in this area between nations. The EU, with all of its problems, has succeeded greatly in building on this concept, leading to even greater scientific cooperation.
We are living now in an Age of Discovery unparalleled. To turn our backs on it is very foolish.