Is there an alternative to EU membership? What if Britain left the EU?
Would it be a disastrous or liberating experience? What trade
relationships could the UK forge outside the EU? How would economic and
social policy be different? What are the implications for sovereignty
and democracy? This text seeks to answer these questions through
exploring the future options for Britain regarding its relationship with
the European Union (EU). To the British establishment it seemed obvious
that joining the process towards greater European integration would
reverse the UK's post-war declining political influence and accelerate
its rate of economic growth. Consequently, a recurrent theme is that UK
participation in ever closer European integration is widely perceived as
'inevitable'. In contrast, this book both addresses and challenges this
presumption by illustrating that a variety of alternative forms of
relationship are feasible, together with outlining possible policy
options that may compliment and enhance the consequences arising from
the fundamental decision of how the UK determines its future.