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Great Britain's confidence in a Brexit No Deal is growing, and no wonder.
Every day, we are better and better equipped than the European Union and in particular Ireland to cope with the turbulence.
The new united government of Boris Johnson is not limited to his goal: to prepare and spend as much as necessary.
It is our economy that remains fundamentally strong and defies all predictions of gloom. Unemployment, which is expected to skyrocket a few months after a vote on Brexit, had the opposite effect: a million jobs were created.
Growth, which should collapse, has been growing slowly, but not more slowly than in the EU as a whole. Inflation and interest rates are low and seem stable.
The amount of venture capital investment in UK startups, mostly foreign, is set for a record year. Billions more will flow once we are out, even with No Deal, and the uncertainty eventually dissipates.
The remains jump into the pen like an existential disaster. But our floating currency gives us a huge advantage over the euro zone. It is a balancing mechanism in times of crisis.
The same falling book that is bad for British holidaymakers abroad and can fuel inflation, increase our exports, create jobs and attract more tourists.
And although the head of the Bank of England, Mark Carney, is always pessimistic about No Deal, it's nothing compared to the dire warnings of his central bank for Ireland.
Germany, its car manufacturers in a desperate situation, could be heading for a recession. Italy is in trouble. The growth of France is almost at a standstill. The EU economy is in trouble, there are only a few defenses left. A No Deal – which they can always choose to avoid – could be a deadly blow.
There could be a logistical chaos here, like here, maybe for months. But Britain – free to overburden our economy with much lower taxes, less paperwork and new global trade agreements – will emerge in a richer future.
"Countries are more resilient than people think," said White House chief economist Gary Cohn this week.
The Sun believes that Boris and the EU should always seek an agreement.
But Britain should fear much less than Brussels and Dublin.
Comment
JAMES FORSYTH
EU must take first step to resume Brexit negotiations
TREVOR KAVANAGH
Boris Johnson turns the tables on the Irish Prime Minister as he dispels the myth of the safety net
Plans for Nigel
NIGEL Farage has become the best badet of the remains.
We do not blame him or the Brexit party. They had every interest in Theresa May leading the Brexit on the rocks.
But the by-elections of Peterborough and Brecon prove that the split of the vote of permission gives rise to a remaining member. At the national level, it could kill the Conservatives and the Brexit Party and empower those who have sworn to keep us in the EU.
Farage did more than anyone to get us out. But he must think about the future now.
Because it puts all this in danger.
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