Its not about £s relative strength vs other currencies its more about the downsides to no longer using it...either trying to unofficially use the £ (and therefore have limited ability to expand money supply or issue debt - IE no way to finance sudden costs like Furlough) or issue a new currency that fucks anyone with debt in sterling and leads to bank runs.clydecloggie wrote: ↑Mon Sep 21, 2020 11:25 am Is the 'losing the pound' thing - where it is held up as a huge downside of independence - a genuine economic argument or just Rule Britannia bullshitting?
I sort of got it in 2014, back when sterling was a a strong and stable currency beloved of the financial markets. But following the Brexit vote, what's the point of clinging on to a weak currency with an uncertain future?
Good primer here: https://www.these-islands.co.uk/publica ... dache.aspx
Basically this is why Salmond tried to convince people that the UK would enter a formal currency union with Scotland in 2014.