that future historians will look back and see this as a time when the crisis actually broke the deadlock around fiscal policy and really started to align fiscal policy, not closely with monetary policy, but more closely to it than there's been in the past. Do you think that's easier now with Brexit having been completed for Europe to move forward? It's definitely a lot easier now that the UK is not there anymore because the UK was of course the surface, the approach to that. And of course, it was also out of the single currency. So one more question for you, Gillian, has to do with energy markets. This of course is a huge story that's kind of been buried again. Everything is, nothing compares to coronavirus, but the world does go on. And a few weeks ago, and we covered this with Ben Hubbard, the Middle East correspondent for the New York Times. We covered this story about the fallout between Russia and Saudi Arabia and Saudi Arabia's expansion of its supply in the face of collapsing (40/43)
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