THE OBSERVER: Poor pay and conditions for HGV drivers and the loss of many thousands of EU workers are plunging the UKs supply chain into crisis
Gaps on supermarket shelves. Fast food outlets pulling milkshakes and bottled drinks from their menus. Restaurants running out of chicken and closing. Empty vending machines. Online grocery orders full of substitutions. Fruit and vegetables rotting in the fields.
These are just some of the most visible signs of Britain’s deepening supply chain crisis, which has seen stocks in shops and warehouses slump to their lowest levels since the Confederation of British Industry began surveying in 1983.
It has led to dire warnings that the UK’s food system, which has been hit hardest by delivery delays and labour shortages, is in danger of reaching breaking point and may not be able to meet Christmas demand.
Customers may have only started noticing this crisis in recent weeks but it has been building for months, with businesses, road hauliers and transport unions telling ministers at the start of the summer that a shortage of lorry drivers could lead to empty shelves.
The logistics industry estimates around 100,000 more HGV drivers are needed to get goods and materials moving again. The shortfall has emerged, in part, because 14,000 EU drivers have left the country and only 600 have returned since Brexit. The pandemic has also disrupted training and tests for new drivers: around 40,000 HGV driving tests were cancelled last year. » | Tom Wall & Phillip Inman | Sunday, August 28, 2021
“My dear! Don’t you know? Haven’t you heard? These shortages are caused by Brexit. You know, that silly referendum Cameron called to shut up the right-wing loons, the whingers, in the Tory Party. He thought it would shut ‘em up, but he had the shock of life when the results were returned in favour of leaving! He had wanted to heal the longstanding rift in his Party, but instead projected the rift onto our nation. It was cause for his resignation. But now the people are suffering.”
“Well, I do declare!”
“This is what really happened: The ‘squillionaire class’, smelling lots of dough from leaving the EU, conned the 'little people' into believing that if we left, Britain could get its greatness back again. After all, Britannia did indeed rule the waves once upon a time!
The idea of leaving caught the people’s imagination. They say it was common to hear such refrains as this in the streets: ”I’m definitely voting to leave, Ethel. We don’t want ‘them forriners’ telling us what to do! In any case, they say we’ll get our blue passports back if we leave! Oh yes, I votin’ to leave! Definitely!”
“But the shortages in the shops and poor quality of fruit and vegetables are the result of this madness, my dear! It’s a high price to pay for this illusory thing called sovereignty, don’t you think?”
‘Sovrinty’! What’s that then? – Mark