The Scotsman

Engineerin­g exports slip on no-deal fears

- By HANNAH BURLEY

Scotland’s engineerin­g exports have been knocked by “deep concern” over the impact of a potential no-deal Brexit, according to new research.

The latest quarterly report from trade body Scottish Engineerin­g shows industry exports are at negative levels unseen since 2016, dropping to a balance of -13 points from +5 in the previous quarter.

Overall output volume and business optimism in the sector also slipped below zero for the first time in three years.

Scottish Engineerin­g cited a “deep concern across industry that the new prime minister and cabinet are following a course with an unacceptab­ly high probabilit­y of a no-deal Brexit”.

Staffing levels crept higher in the quarter, indicating investment in people and skills.

Three in ten engineerin­g companies reported reliance on the availabili­ty of non-uk nationals in the workforce, while six in ten rejected the UK government’s proposed salary threshold of £30,000 for eligible roles.

Chief executive Paul Sheerin said: “The stark reality is that no-deal means wasted resource to secure work arounds, added costs for zero value and material uncertaint­y in business sustainabi­lity.

“The UK’S current position seems unthinkabl­e, in that we have a situation where the government appears to be ignoring the very people and businesses – who actually understand what it takes to import and export the goods that sustain our society and economy. And they are saying quite clearly – whatever else you do, don’t do this.”

 ??  ?? 0 Scottish Engineerin­g chief exec Paul Sheerin
0 Scottish Engineerin­g chief exec Paul Sheerin

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