The UK faces higher food prices without continued access to EU workers, 30 food and drink associations have warned.
In a letter published in the Guardian, they argue that EU workers play an important role in the supply chain and some are already starting to leave.

It called on the government to offer "unambiguous reassurance" about their right to remain.
The Home Office said in response it was "harnessing the industry's knowledge" and "ensuring their voice was heard".
Nearly four million people in the UK are employed in everything from harvesting to production to selling food and drink.
In food manufacturing just under a third of workers are from the EU.
"Workers
from the EU, some of whom are already leaving the UK, play a
significant role in delivering affordable and high-quality food and
drink," the letter said.
"The government should offer unambiguous
reassurance to EU workers throughout our supply chain about their right
to remain. For the longer term, it is important to recognise that these
workers are highly flexible and provide an essential reservoir of
skilled, semi-skilled and unskilled labour."

The trade associations also warn that the country's food security is
at risk and that many workers are already leaving in the wake of the
Brexit vote and the fall in the value of the pound.
They call for
the importance of the industry to be recognised to the country's
"economic and physical wellbeing" and argue that it should receive equal
treatment to the financial or automotive sectors.
"All options
should be explored, including a workable points-based system for
shortage occupations, sector-based and seasonal/guest worker schemes and
effective transitionary arrangements," they say.
"If they are not, the UK will face less food choice and higher food prices."
Signatories
to the letter include the Food and Drink Federation, the Association of
Cereal Food Manufacturers and the British Beer and Pubs Association.
Nestle chair Dame Fiona Kendrick, who is also president of the Food
and Drink Federation, says there are "a lot of skills we're not able to
meet" in the UK.
Very often companies have to look abroad for
food engineers and other skilled labour, because not enough graduates
are coming through from UK universities, she says.
'Complex issue'
Farms also rely on unskilled workers coming from other parts of the EU.
"We just can't find the people in the UK to do the jobs," she told the BBC.
That
sentiment was echoed by the National Farmers Union. It said that many
companies who provide farmers with agricultural workers just couldn't
meet demand.
"The horticulture sector is on red alert and there
will be crops rotting in the field if they can not be picked, it's as
simple as that," Minnette Batters, deputy president of the NFU, told
Radio 4's You and Yours.
"As shoppers, we really enjoy being able
to stretch the food season. You can now buy a British strawberry from
the end of March until the end of November, but they are reliant on the
human hands to pick them," she said.
Food and drink exports are worth £18bn, with Scotch whisky, chocolate, beer and salmon the biggest exports by value.
"The
UK needs a fair and controlled immigration policy and that is exactly
what this government will deliver," a Home Office spokesman said.
"We
want to see net migration to the UK fall to sustainable levels - the
tens of thousands. But we recognise this is a complex issue and that
there is no quick fix.
"As we draw up our plans to leave the EU,
we are harnessing industry's knowledge and experience and ensuring their
voice is heard."
No comments:
Post a Comment