The Scotsman

SCOTTISH PERSPECTIV­E

Scotland’s daily forum for comment, analysis and new ideas

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Don’t panic! Don’t panic! It’s hard to avoid the image of Dad’s Army’s Lance Corporal Jones in the immortal television sitcom as we approach the Hallowe’en deadline for a ‘no-deal’ Brexit.

Barely a day passes without earnest warnings from pundits and politician­s, business leaders and farmers, that we stand on the brink of a ‘crash-out’ cataclysm.

Few critical supplies will be spared disruption. Vegetables and fruits, basic foodstuffs, medical supplies, cars and critical components, building materials and household items: supply chains developed over years face traumatic disruption.

It doesn’t matter how much money the government flings at last minute no-deal preparatio­ns: announceme­nts intended to reassure are lost amid reports that thousands of businesses have not been offered advice on how to cope, and that the myriad small firm suppliers to giant companies are effectivel­y helpless.

Should we be stoic? Or should we panic? Of course, there are still more than twoand-a-half months to go till Armageddon Day. No need to fill the supermarke­t trolleys and pack our fridges to bursting just yet.

But every sign of a half-empty supermarke­t display of bananas or less than overflowin­g baskets of pomegranat­es triggers a frisson of apprehensi­on, a neurotic alarm bell: is this the start? What will it be like next week? What if the peaches run out? Or the Parma ham disappears? Or the Belgian choccy biscuits?

Of course, we’ll stick to stocking up only on essentials, won’t we? But my brother, a devoted Remainer, is also a zealous devotee of those chocolate covered Mini-magnum ice cream lollies. And last week he bought an industrial supply of them in a box that now takes up much of the freezer. In the grim catastroph­e that awaits us, there is surely a need for those lighter, non-essential items to help keep up civilian morale. But Heaven help us if there’s a power cut.

No need to panic? It’s not hard to imagine that on 31 October the BBC TV helicopter­s

will be swooping low over Dover, bringing fearful 24-7 live pictures of a snaking queue of lorries and hundreds of commercial vans in a deadlocked standstill. Angry drivers will be interviewe­d cursing Brexit and all its works.

Few scenes are likely to stir a greater sense of apprehensi­on and panic as the camera pans over the gridlock. But by then it’s too late. For in between the lingering shots of gridlocked lorries, the coverage switches to breathless commentato­rs giving updates on riotous supermarke­t invasions across the country. Shoppers are seen packing their trolleys full of every available ‘must stock’ item from tea bags to toilet rolls, pet food to pineapple juice. As for French and Italian wines, grab what you can – before all the shelves gang dry.

On BBC Newsnight, a hectoring Emily Maitliss barely allows some hapless government minister to gasp for air before resuming, with forceful contempt, a barrage of hostile questions. And it’s little better on the other channel with Robert Peston, as SNP Commons leader Ian Blackford, the go-to herald of apocalypse, declares “I told you so” and calls for a second referendum (that’s a second Scottish independen­ce referendum, he adds, to help confused English viewers).

How long might the panic last? Any transport seizure at Dover could be addressed by diverting lorries to ferries made available at other UK ports, with hauliers’ extra costs met from the Treasury’s contingenc­y fund. In extremis, prolonged gridlock could result in a Dunkirksty­le flotilla of boats collecting supplies on the beaches of Normandy as French farmers seek to sell their product to salivating UK customers.

Looking further ahead, as we cannot readily stockpile fresh fruit and veg, Scottish farmers could exploit opportunit­ies to meet increased demand. We could also be turfing over our garden lawns to grow potatoes, carrots and green beans. However, we must be patient and brace ourselves for disappoint­ment as not all have green fingers. On my previous experience with a potato barrel, the crop yielded spuds no bigger than marbles and even those were sufficient for barely two salad meals. But by then we might have turned to frontier foods such as seaweed and nutrientri­ch sea buckthorn: the best weapons yet against obesity.

We are in for anxious days, to be sure, and scare stories will abound. But panics of any sort become self-exhausting. And they are more often defeated in the end by inventiven­ess. Panic ye not: few barriers, regulatory or tariff, can long withstand the timeless ingenuity of willing buyer and willing seller to rise above the obstacles and meet mutual needs.

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