This will no doubt say more about me than it will about most of you:
You're treating the 'financial markets' and 'economists' and 'political think tanks' as if (respectively) they abided by fundamental universal laws instead of simply being ever-changing tools for ever-changing clients with ever-changing wants; they were rigorous and dis-interested scientists and mathematicians instead of the doctrine-bound theologians and self-serving magicians that actually are; they stood outside and above the financial markets and economic theories like angelic and omniscient titans, when in fact they are not only influenced by but are often at the service of the very forces they pretend to understand.
What will happen after a yes vote (or a no vote)? Let me tell you: for the vast majority of folks -- not including of course the economists, journalists, think tankers, and financiers -- life will go on exactly as it always has, with some doing better (financially) than others, with some healthier and/or happier and some much less so, marrying, meeting friends for a pint, retiring, shopping, divorcing, starting a family, gardening, complaining about the euro, making fun of the French, visiting the doctor, trudging off to work, travelling, playing golf (or not), window-shopping, day dreaming, taking their children to school, making dinner, glued to their i-phones, taking weekends in Paris, drinking coffee and visiting the Louvre, donating to charity, getting hammered/plastered/legless, watching the Premier League, praying, buying a house, flirting with a co-worker, moving to the country, watching porn, worrying about death or about life, designing golf courses (or not), renting a flat in London, loving and being loved, crying, laughing, comforting those who mourn, and making ends meet.
Peter