Seven years after Brexit, the UK has recorded its highest inflation rate in four decades | The National Gazette
3 min readSeven years after Brexit, the UK has its highest inflation rate in four decades
A combination of factors caused chaos in the region: strong winds, an increase in the volume of vehicles departing for Holy Week, and delays in passport checks for travelers between the two countries.
This bureaucracy among European neighbors is only one of the results of a decision the British made some seven years ago.
The UK is facing a crisis that can be explained with the help of a tomato. Fruit, with the advent of vegetables, entered rationing in British markets – in some chains, even with a limit on sales per customer, the shelves were empty.
She claims that the United Kingdom might have cut some of the effects of these crises, had it not been for Brexit.
Joel Ryland, a researcher at King’s College, explains this This result was the main reason for emigration.
He notes that “as citizens of the EU, workers from 27 other countries can come and go unhindered. The main aim of Brexit is to control this flow.”
And Promises went further: there would be more money for the public health system, more jobs for Britons and higher wages.
“But seven years later, we see that this is not the realityThe researcher says: In recent months, what we have seen was a strike in health, transportation and various sectors.
- The UK is staging the biggest general strike in a decade
Since officially leaving the European Union, the UK has lost more than 460,000 European workers, and only 30% of that workforce has been matched with people from other countries.
“Everywhere you go on a street in central London, for example, you see signs saying ‘hiring’, because many companies are having real difficulties filling vacancies nowadays,” says Fernanda.
“We haven’t seen an increase in jobs for Britons, because of a shortage of workers in sectors that depend heavily on immigration,” says Joel.
There are fewer people working in shops and transportation as well as in the tomato fields. When the UK was part of a single market, it was easy for companies to hire Europeans. Now, they need to bring in workers from further afield, from countries like Nepal, and they end up paying more for work visas, for example.
Sarah Shiffling explains that the Temporary visas last less than the annual tomato growing and harvest season, which forces many companies to train two sets of employees. And if it was difficult to grow it there, it has become much more difficult to bring it from abroad after Brexit.
“You have additional forms and additional inspections. All of this, this bureaucracy, increases the time to bring production into the UK, so it’s definitely one of the reasons you can’t find tomatoes as easily as before,” says Fernanda.
In one year, for every five tomatoes consumed by the British, an average of four tomatoes were produced in other countries.
“We’ve seen huge queues at the ports.”says expert Sarah Shiffling. This is more of a concern for those who sell fresh produce.
“Brexit has increased food prices by about 6%,” says Joel Ryland, based on studies on the sector.
Research shows that approx 20% of those who voted to leave the European Union regret it. The main answer is that things have gone wrong.
“It’s hard to say exactly how much of this is Brexit’s fault, but if the country was still in the bloc it wouldn’t be vulnerable to international crises,” Joel says.
“Devoted food specialist. General alcohol fanatic. Amateur explorer. Infuriatingly humble social media scholar. Analyst.”