by Yahoo _Evening Standard London
https://uk.finance.yahoo.com/news/anthony-hilton-hard-brexit-strategies-090900770.html More
Dominic
Raab may have not known that Dover was a major port and Chris Grayling slipped
up when he gave £14 million for a ferry route to Ramsgate even though the
chosen company had no ships and no port contract. But they are politicians. The
public sector professionals took another view.
The Civil
Service decided that things could be tough if we left the European Union
without a deal because it might well cause huge disruption. They thought a lot
of businesses might fail; they thought the supply chain might be fractured;
they worried about panic buying of food. So they made preparations to mitigate
things.
Food supply
is a case in point. More than half of it comes from the European Union and if
this were blocked or impeded in some way how would Britain cope? Last summer
and autumn Defra, the ministry which deals with food, held regular weekly
meetings with the supermarkets and their trade bodies on specifically this
point.
The
industry was told to work on the supply chain to stockpile where appropriate,
and to put in place procedures that sought to make sure that basic supplies could
get through.
This is the
result. There may have been a shortage of toilet rolls and dried pasta but in
essence the supermarkets have stayed open and there is now no real shortage of
most supplies in spite of a huge surge in demand. Think about that for a
moment. It is an astonishing achievement.
Medicines
had a similar treatment. Again, a great many of Britain’s health products come
from the European Union. There were serious concerns about a hard Brexit’s
impact on cancer treatments, for example, and other more prosaic drugs might
also quickly become out of stock in chemists, regardless of what the voters’
prescriptions said. But again this has not happened. The supply chain has
coped. Pharmacies have stayed open.
It is the
same with other sectors — among others cross-Channel shipping and home shopping
were put under the microscope. There are shortages of testing kits, face masks
and protective clothing but this was not in the Brexit scenario. That perhaps
makes the point. Virus-testing kits were mentioned a couple of years ago only
to have those vetoed on cost grounds by the Department of Health. Brexit
preparations were less bothered about the money.
Aid to
companies was also on the agenda. It was thought that aircraft manufacturers
like Airbus, and car firms like BMW, could have their production disrupted and
have to lay off workers to protect their cashflow. Hence the suggestion that
the Government lend companies the cash to keep their workers on the payroll.
It was
announced by Chancellor Rishi Sunak, but it was not just something which came
out of thin air. The groundwork for this and the aid for smaller companies was
quietly talked about in the Civil Service six months ago.
There is
mention of Government taking equity stakes in companies, the rail franchises
for example. Even the Conservative party’s backbench MPs, much as they may
dislike it, seem to accept that this may need to be done. They have certainly
not rubbished it as they did Labour’s plans for something similar.
But one
area where they have not got the answer is migration. It is reported that
farmers fear for their crops as the season unfolds because the travel
restrictions mean fruit-picking workers from the EU will no longer come.
Romanians in particular used to visit for the season. But they did this too in
other European countries. France and Germany now have a similar issue.
So
coronavirus is making us think about stakeholders rather than shareholders, the
Government propping up companies, nationalisation, the role of the public
sector, the NHS, migration, the distribution of rewards, even a basic income
for all. Who knows but we even might make a step towards working on climate
change — in economic terms it would be a lot less damaging than this virus.
This is all
a far cry from Trump’s America and his idea that the private sector can do it
all. In contrast we are using some of the tools of Brexit to realise we are
actually more European.
Section Two Even before the Commisioner speaks out, Rumanian workers are invite to UK shores to help out with the crop harvest in the context of the confinement rules in place and today's labour market
Section Two Even before the Commisioner speaks out, Rumanian workers are invite to UK shores to help out with the crop harvest in the context of the confinement rules in place and today's labour market
Lockdown exits will need more open borders - EU jobs chief
https://uk.news.yahoo.com/lockdown-exits-more-open-borders-121356509.html
..... Schmit said the EU executive was talking to governments to find a solution, including to establish how seasonal farm labourers, also identified as critical, could travel to plant or harvest crops. Local people would not have the skills that the largely eastern European workers possessed.
Up to 80,000 seasonal workers are due to arrive by plane in Germany in April and May, but hundreds of thousands are needed across the bloc. Schmit said a major issue was provision of accommodation that allowed social distancing.
Schmit, whose EU brief includes minimum wages and rights for platform workers, said the crisis had taught people that professions they might not have regarded highly in the past were important and deserved adequate pay.
"No way are these issues that have been pushed away," he said.
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