Brexit cold turkey: UK tries to kick 25-year imported labour habit
Send a link to a friend
[October 05, 2021]
By Guy Faulconbridge
LONDON (Reuters) - The United Kingdom's
25-year-old model of importing cheap labour has been up-ended by Brexit
and COVID-19, sowing the seeds for a 1970s-style winter of discontent
complete with worker shortages, spiralling wage demands and price rises.
Leaving the European Union, followed by the chaos of the biggest public
health crisis in a century, has plunged the world's fifth-largest
economy into a sudden attempt to kick its addiction to cheap imported
labour.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson's Brexit experiment - unique among major
economies - has further strained supply chains already creaking globally
for everything from pork and poultry to medicines and milk.
Wages, and thus prices, will have to rise.
The longer-term impact on growth, Johnson's political fortunes and the
United Kingdom's on-off relationship with the European Union is unclear.
"It's really a big turning point for the UK and an opportunity for us to
go in a different direction," Johnson, 57, said when asked about the
labour shortages.

"What I won't do is go back to the old failed model of low wages, low
skills, supported by uncontrolled immigration."
He said Britons had voted for change in the 2016 Brexit referendum and
again in 2019, when a landslide election win made Johnson the most
powerful Conservative prime minister since Margaret Thatcher.
Stagnant wages, he said, would have to rise - for some, the economic
logic behind the Brexit vote. Johnson has bluntly told business leaders
in closed meetings to pay workers more.
"Taking back control" of immigration was a key message of the Brexit
campaign, which the Johnson-led "Leave" campaign narrowly won. He later
promised to protect the country from the "job-destroying machine" of the
European Union.
BREXIT 'ADJUSTMENT'
Johnson casts his Brexit gamble as an "adjustment" though opponents say
he is dressing up a labour shortage as a golden opportunity for workers
to increase their wages.
But restricting immigration amounts to a generational change in the
United Kingdom's economic policy, right after the pandemic triggered a
10% contraction in 2020, the worst in more than 300 years.
As the EU expanded eastward after the 1989 fall of the Berlin Wall,
Britain and other major European economies welcomed millions of migrants
from countries like Poland, which joined the bloc in 2004.

No-one really knows how many people came: in mid-2021, the British
government said it had received more than 6 million applications from EU
nationals for settlement, more than double the number it believed were
in the country in 2016.
After Brexit, the government stopped giving priority to EU citizens over
people from elsewhere.
Brexit prompted many eastern European workers - including around 25,000
truckers - to leave the country just as around 40,000 truck licence
tests were halted due to the pandemic.
Britain is now short of about 100,000 truckers, leading to queues at gas
stations and worries about getting food into supermarkets, with a lack
of butchers and warehouse workers also causing concern.
[to top of second column]
|

A sign informing customers that fuel has run out is pictured at a
Esso fuel station in London, Britain, October 4, 2021.
REUTERS/Hannah McKay/File Photo

"Wages will have to go up, so prices for everything
we deliver, everything you buy on the shelves, will have to go up
too," said Craig Holness, a British trucker with 27 years
experience.
Wages have already soared: a heavy goods vehicle (HGV) Class 1
driver job was being advertised for 75,000 pounds ($102,500) per
annum, the highest the recruiter had ever heard of.
WINTER OF DISCONTENT?
The Bank of England said last month that CPI inflation was set to
rise to 4% late this year, "owing largely to developments in energy
and goods prices", and that the case for raising interest rates from
historic lows appeared to have strengthened.
It cited evidence that "recruitment difficulties had become more
widespread and acute", which the Bank's agents had attributed "to a
combination of factors, including demand recovering more quickly
than expected and a reduction in the availability of EU workers".
Johnson's ministers have repeatedly dismissed the idea that Britain
is heading for a "winter of discontent" like that which helped
Thatcher to power in 1979, with spiralling wage demands, inflation
and power shortages - or even that Brexit is factor.
"Our country has been running at a comparatively low rate of wage
growth for a long time - basically stagnant wages and totally
stagnant productivity - and that is because, chronically, we have
failed to invest in people, we have failed to invest in equipment
and you've seen wages flat," Johnson said on Sunday.

But he did not explain how wage stagnation and poor productivity
would be solved by a mixture of lower immigration and higher wages
that fuel inflation which eats into real wages.
It was also unclear how higher prices would affect an economy that
is consumer-driven and increasingly reliant on supply chains whose
tentacles wind across Europe and beyond.
For some observers, the United Kingdom has come full-circle: it
joined the European club in the 1970s as the sick man of Europe and
its exit, many European politicians clearly hope, will lead it back
into a cautionary dead-end.
Johnson's legacy will depend on proving them wrong.
(Reporting by Guy Faulconbridge; Editing by Catherine Evans and
Andrew Heavens)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
 |