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Thursday 31 August 2017

Brexit: and struggling to recruit skilled labour in the food and drink industry

Back in March, the Sun and Telegraph were reporting about fears from the food and drink industry over Brexit:
Worried bosses fear EU nationals working in Britain's food and drink industry are already leaving the UK over Brexit - Sun
Brexit could hit retailers and food suppliers, Moody's warns - Telegraph

Further warnings this week have been reported in the press:
Food industry warns of Brexit workforce shortage - BBC News
EU migrant exodus threatens UK food and drink industry, warns survey | The Independent
One in three UK food firms 'unviable' without European workers - report - BelfastTelegraph.co.uk
Half of food and drink EU workers consider leaving UK - food manufacture

This is how the Guardian reported the story:





Food and drink industry says EU staff exodus will damage economy

Brexit warnings from trade bodies come as businesses across UK struggle to recruit skilled labour



EU nationals working as seasonal migrant farm labourers pick oakleaf lettuce in Tarleton, Lancashire.
 EU nationals working as seasonal migrant farm labourers pick oakleaf lettuce in Tarleton, Lancashire. Photograph: Alamy

The food and drink industry has issued a warning of significant disruption and economic damage if the government fails to stem the flow of EU nationals leaving the UK.
Nearly a third of British food and drink businesses have had non-UK EU workers leave their employment since last summer’s Brexit vote, according to a survey of more than 600 businesses representing nearly a quarter of the food chain’s 4 million workforce. Almost half said more planned to leave because of uncertainty about their future.
Retailers, farmers, food processors, pubs and restaurateurs have clubbed together to lobby the government to avoid a “cliff-edge” Brexit, which they said would affect their ability to grow, produce and serve the food we eat.




The prime minister, Theresa May, has offered EU nationals who arrive lawfully before Brexit the chance to build up the same rights to work as UK citizens. But her proposal fell short of the EU’s demand for its citizens living in the UK to maintain all EU rights in perpetuity.
The Home Office said initial proposals for a new immigration system would be released this autumn. A government spokesperson added: “We have already been clear there will be an implementation period after we leave the EU to avoid a cliff edge for businesses.”
About a fifth of the 2 million EU nationals working in the UK are involved in the food industry – either in farming, food processing, retailing or catering.
Ian Wright, director general of the Food and Drink Federation, which represents more than 6,000 processors and manufacturers, said: “It is only a matter of time before the uncertainty reported by businesses results in an irreversible exit of EU workers from these shores. This is a scenario that will hurt the UK culturally and economically.”
Andrew Opie, director of food and sustainability at the British Retail Consortium, which represents most major British retailers, said: “An abrupt reduction in the number of EU workers eligible to work in the UK after Brexit would result in significant disruption for the entire food supply chain, with consequences for the availability and price of UK goods for consumers.



Workers from eastern Europe pick strawberries on a farm in Kent.
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 Workers from eastern Europe pick strawberries in Kent. Photograph: Andy Hall for the Observer

“EU workers are key to getting British food on our shelves; from producing food, through transport to colleagues in store they are vital in providing the service and quality British consumers demand.”
He said EU workers needed more clarity about their status once the UK leaves the European Union.
The latest warnings from the food industry came as British businesses faced their biggest challenge in recruiting skilled labour in a decade. High employment has combined with a fall in the value of the pound and uncertainty about the future for EU nationals in the UK to reduce the pool of available staff.
A net balance of 52% of 1,500 UK companies questioned in May said they had experienced difficulty in recruiting skilled labour over the past six months, compared with 31% in January, according to the predominantly small- and medium-sized businesses surveyed for Lloyds bank’s regular Business in Britain report.
The National Farmers’ Union has also said the number of seasonal workers coming to the UK this year had dropped by 17%. It blamed the lack of clarity on the future for EU workers and a drop in the value of sterling. 


Food and drink industry says EU staff exodus will damage economy | Business | The Guardian

See also:
Futures Forum: Brexit: and bad pay

And:
Futures Forum: Brexit: and strawberries
Futures Forum: Brexit: and our dependence on foreign goods and labour
Futures Forum: Brexit: and the future of food

And:
Futures Forum: Brexit: and catering, construction and care sectors getting ready
Futures Forum: Brexit: and the hospitality industry >>> migrant labour and low-wages
Futures Forum: Brexit: and an uncertain future for the hospitality industry
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