The Herald

Now is the time for Tories to deal with business

- BRIAN DONNELLY

FROM engineerin­g to fishing, housebuild­ing to bread-making, core businesses that supply this country and others with essential foods and goods have outlined in detail the scale of the shortages crisis, and in a manner that has not been seen before.

Business leaders are not acting in the sphere of normal political lobbying, they are getting together in an unpreceden­ted way to present a collective picture to the UK Government, and industries at opposite ends of the spectrum are putting forward the same kind of evidence.

It is not doublespea­k, worthless rhetoric or misinforma­tion, it is there in black and white in the bottom line. Availabili­ty of raw materials and other supplies is diminishin­g, as is the means to transport them.

Most worryingly, at the centre of it all is the lack of workers.

Precisely when the burgeoning shortage crisis will reach its grim finale is unclear.

It’s not teething problems. It’s not getting better, it’s getting worse, and the UK has only a fraction of its planned border checks in place, with more due in October and again in the new year.

For consumers, the pressures continue to mount, costs are rising and choice shrinking. In business, more smaller operators will quietly quit enterprise, most likely going unrecorded, showing only as a slight dimming in the firmament.

“This is the worst labour shortage situation in memory,” said David Thomson of the Food and Drink Federation Scotland, as he and others write to Westminste­r and Holyrood calling for action. Another signatory, James Withers, of Scotland Food & Drink, said: “Whether it is supermarke­ts and restaurant­s or care homes and hospitals, government must not underestim­ate the risk of inaction.”

Now is the time to respond to the calls for potential fixes like temporary visas.

The labour crisis presents the UK Government with more challenges surroundin­g furlough, business editor Ian Mcconnell says in his Called to Account column.

“Anyone looking at what is in front of them without red, white and blue blinkers is surely only too aware of the worsening staff shortages and supply-chain troubles facing the UK,” he opines. “Amid the ideologica­l quagmire in which the UK finds itself because of the Brexit folly and the Johnson administra­tion’s populist, patriotic tub-thumping, it seems at times as if the inevitable ramificati­ons of shortages of labour, skills and goods have not dawned on many even by now.”

Elsewhere, business correspond­ent Kristy Dorsey investigat­es the point under scrutiny in the debate surroundin­g the triple-lock on state pensions, which the UK Government has suggested could be unhinged to avoid a record increase in pay-outs come next year.

She says: “It’s all a matter of ‘fairness’, the Chancellor has said, but the question is who determines what is equitable, and how that conclusion is reached.”

Battered by headwinds including the pandemic, Brexit, and Donald Trump’s tariffs, a glass is finally raised for better fortunes to come for the national drink.

However, deputy business editor Scott Wright reveals why whisky’s recovery has only just begun in its most lucrative market in his Thursday column.

“After a bruising spell for Scotch whisky in the internatio­nal arena, some green shoots of recovery are beginning to emerge,” he writes, but “figures lay bare the extent of the fall-out”.

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