The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Nearly third of pig firms see workforce exodus

Two-thirds have reported more difficulty in sourcing EU labour

- Nancy nicolson farming ediTor nnicolson@thecourier.co.uk

Nearly 30% of pig businesses have seen workers leave since the EU referendum, according to a survey by the National Pig Associatio­n (NPA).

The organisati­on says two-thirds of businesses have reported more difficulty in finding EU labour since the vote, and has called on the Government to take steps to preserve access to European workers.

In a submission to the Migration Advisory Committee (Mac), the NPA warned the UK pig industry faced a labour crisis and appealed for a way in which so-called ‘low-skilled’ permanent EU workers remained accessible to the sector.

The submission on behalf of pig farmers, meat processors and allied businesses also queried the use of the term ‘low-skilled’ to describe the EU workers they employed.

NPA chief executive Zoe Davies said although many roles did not require graduate level training, they did require a high degree of technical skill.

“The Government has made it clear it wants to restrict permanent so-called low-skilled workers after we leave the EU,” she said.

“The NPA is making the argument in the strongest possible terms ‘lower skilled’ workers employed in the pig sector should be included on the ‘shortage occupation’ list and prioritise­d after we leave the EU.

“We are already seeing the effects of Brexit on our ability to secure EU workers and our survey highlights the scale of the crisis this sector faces if we get our immigratio­n policy wrong.

“Without the workers, we simply can’t produce and process the fabulous British pork enjoyed by millions of consumers.

“Exporting pork production is in nobody’s interest.”

The survey, which was hosted on the NPA’s website, received 138 responses from the industry.

Findings showed that around 90% of businesses using non-UK labour employed them on a permanent basis, with 94% of non-UK workers coming from the EU.

Nearly half of those employing EU labour said these workers were considerin­g leaving the UK due to uncertaint­y over Brexit.

Meanwhile four in every five respondent­s said farming was not being offered as an attractive propositio­n by UK educationa­l establishm­ents, and more than half claimed colleges were not providing employees with the necessary skills. NPA senior policy adviser Ed Barker said farming was often not seen as a desirable career.

He said: “The talent and enthusiasm is out there. It is critical that, as we leave the EU, the agricultur­al industry works with Government and the educationa­l sector to champion agricultur­e as a great place to work and to provide the right training and skills to meet the sector’s needs.”

 ??  ?? The National Pig Associatio­n said the sector faces a labour crisis.
The National Pig Associatio­n said the sector faces a labour crisis.

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