'This is chaos': Christmas prices will rise in Britain, truckers say
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[September 30, 2021]
By Guy Faulconbridge and Ben Makori
TATSFIELD, England (Reuters) -Truck drivers
have a cautionary message for British Prime Minister Boris Johnson: an
acute shortage of drivers is ratcheting up their wages and that will
have a knock-on effect on prices for food and gifts in the run-up to
Christmas.
An air of chaos has gripped the world's fifth-largest economy in recent
days as a deficit of truckers left fuel pumps dry across the land, and a
spike in European wholesale natural gas prices tipped energy companies
into bankruptcy.
The United Kingdom is short of around 100,000 truckers after tens of
thousands returned to the European Union during the Brexit maelstrom and
40,000 truck driver tests were cancelled during the COVID-19 lockdowns.
At Clacket Lane service station beside London's M25 orbital motorway,
drivers from Britain, France, Germany, Poland, Latvia, Lithuania,
Portugal, Romania, Russia and Turkey were parked up to rest after
journeys from every corner of Europe.
Over the faint whiff of sewage, cigarette smoke and diesel fumes in the
truck park, scores of drivers told Reuters in several different tongues
that wages would have to rise.
They spoke of a hard and lonely life on the road: filthy showers, high
parking fees, nights disturbed by thieves wielding knives, illegal
migrants seeking a secret ride, and of the pain of divorce after years
spent far from wives and children.
"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 51-year-old British trucker with 27 years of experience, who
was parked up for a break.
Rising trucker pay may give an insight into a riddle that is bothering
investors: whether or not the world is on the cusp of persistent price
rises after the splurge by governments and central banks during the
COVID crisis.
Sterling has fallen on fears the trucker shortage could crimp economic
growth, forecast at 7% this year. Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey
said on Wednesday he was focused on the inflationary effects from supply
shortages including of labour.
Haulier companies and recruitment agencies are battling to fill trucker
jobs: One was advertising for a heavy goods vehicle (HGV) Class 1 driver
for 75,000 pounds ($102,500) per annum, the highest level the recruiter
had ever heard of.
"With HGV drivers, we're now paying them 40% more than we were four
months ago," Jordan Francis, the commercial director of recruitment
agency ProDrive, told Reuters.
He recalled a driver whose pay per hour had increased to 22.50 pounds
per hour from 14.00 pounds per hour in March. Sign-on bonuses of 1,000
are being offered too.
'MARRIAGE KILLER'
Holness said the shortage of drivers would not ease any time soon
because conditions were so poor that many young people refused to do it.
While trying to snatch some sleep recently near West Bromwich in central
England, thieves sliced an 11-foot hole in his canvas causing hours of
delay and stress.
"Who wants to be a lorry driver - you'd be better tapping away on a
keyboard wouldn't you? Kids these days don't want to know," said Holness.
"I want to get out."
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Lorries are seen at Lymm Services, Lymm, Britain, September 29,
2021. Picture taken with a drone. REUTERS/Jason Cairnduff
He suggested Johnson, who was educated at Eton,
Britain's most exclusive school, and Oxford, its most exclusive
university, should spend several days trucking to understand the
issues.
"You are just treated like the scum of the earth basically," said
Phil, a 52-year-old British truck driver from Malvern in central
England, who has just had what he termed a significant pay rise.
"Prices will increase."
He said many truck stops reeked of urine and faeces - and the job
gave limited time to see family.
"It's a marriage killer," he said.
The government on Sunday announced a plan to issue temporary visas
for 5,000 foreign truck drivers. None of the truck drivers
interviewed by Reuters thought many would take up the offer.
"It is tough work and youngsters don't want it," said Anton Pogodin,
a 37-year-old truck driver originally from Omsk, in Siberia, who now
drives from Portugal.
But in Bucharest, some Romanian truckers were tempted by the offer.
'BREXIT CHAOS'
British ministers have repeatedly denied that Brexit has caused the
trucker shortage but many EU drivers blamed just that for prompting
so many eastern European drivers to head for the exit.
"No one else has these kind of problems that you're finding here,"
said Belgian driver Patrice Rese, 65. "It's because of Brexit."
"Best of luck to you Monsieur Johnson," he quipped.
Miguel Brunel, a 41-year-old driver from Bethune in northern France,
questioned the logic of replacing so many British drivers with those
from eastern Europe only to then essentially prompt those drivers to
leave.
"If they had maintained a market of English drivers rather than
replacing them from drivers from Eastern Europe, they wouldn't be in
this position," said Brunel in French.
"This is chaos," he said.
($1 = 0.7311 pounds)
(Writing by Guy Faulconbridge; additional reporting by Kate Holton
and Jonathan ShenfieldEditing by Alistair Bell, Alexandra Hudson)
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