In a bid to untangle the necks of the two “black swans” at the heart of the current crises – and see which is most to blame – The Sunday Times asked economists at an independent think tank:
The prime minister’s assertion that “wages are rising” is not supported by the data. There is no evidence that labour shortages will lead to a high-wage, high-skill economy
Reduced migration from Brexit may raise some wages but spending power could be eroded by higher inflation. So far, the EU’s spending power is similar to that of the UK, suggesting that Brexit is not the main driver
Verdict: Covid 🦠
The HGV crisis
Brexit has reduced the attractiveness of HGV work in the UK not just because of changes to immigration policy but also because of new border controls and other restrictions
Brexit has aggravated an already existing problem, hence the UK is more severely affected than any other European country
Verdict: Brexit 🇬🇧💔🇪🇺
Labour Shortages
Labour shortages have been seen in many countries as economies rebound from the pandemic. Job vacancies are at a record high in the US
Shortages across sectors are largely the result of the post-Covid reopening
However, Britain seems to have suffered from EU workers’ unwillingness to come back post-pandemic, and Brexit may have affected their decision
Verdict: (mostly) Covid 🦠
Trade shortfalls
Overall, UK trade performance has been weak, especially in exports outside the EU, where it has lost market share
This is worrying given that Brexit was supposed to boost trade with regions outside Europe
How much of this is due to Brexit is unclear. The data is noisy and unreliable, and will probably be revised. We still have little data on the services sector, which makes up around 40 per cent of UK exports to the EU
Verdict: (most likely) Brexit 🇬🇧💔🇪🇺
Rising prices
It is hard to say exactly what is driving inflation, although rising global energy prices are clearly a factor. However, UK and EU trends are similar — as in other parts of the world
This suggests it is not primarily related to Brexit factors
Global shortages due to pandemic-related supply bottlenecks are the main cause of most price rises, although fuel has risen more in the UK than elsewhere
Verdict: Covid 🦠
The overall picture is one of short-term disruptions, mostly due to Covid, that are common to most countries
However, the UK also faces structural adjustments due to Brexit that are likely, over the medium to long-term, to make the UK somewhat poorer thetimes.co.uk/article/covid-…
This does not bode well for Boris Johnson’s vision of a “high-wage, high-productivity” economy
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Millions of middle earners will be more than £3,500 poorer thanks to plans by Rishi Sunak for a stealth raid on income tax that will last at least six years, an analysis for The Times has shown thetimes.co.uk/article/how-wi…
The prime minister and Jeremy Hunt, the chancellor, are thought to have agreed to extend until 2028 a freeze on income tax thresholds that had been due to end two years earlier
The agreement came at a meeting on Monday to discuss how to plug the £35 billion gap in public finances thetimes.co.uk/article/rishi-…
Kwasi Kwarteng attended a private champagne reception hours after delivering his mini-budget where hedge fund managers who would gain from a crash in the pound egged him on to commit to his plans thetimes.co.uk/article/kwasi-…
The chancellor also gave guests insights about forthcoming government spending cuts during the event, which took place at the Chelsea home of Andrew Law, a financier and Conservative Party donor, on the evening of Friday, September 23
Law is worth about £750m and has donated £3.6m to the Tories since 2004. He has acknowledged taking short positions on the pound over recent years, meaning he has profited from the currency’s decline in value
Boris Johnson may never return to live in Downing Street, after a removal firm favoured by past prime ministers was seen outside No 10 while he holidayed in Greece thetimes.co.uk/article/boris-…
Workers from Bishop’s Move were stationed there yesterday, prompting questions over what would happen to the furnishings inside, bought during a controversial luxury refurbishment
Prime ministers can use up to £30k a year of taxpayers’ money to revamp their residence
Three quarters of Tory voters back Sir Keir Starmer’s plan to freeze energy bills as ministers come under pressure to do more to address the “national emergency” of living costs thetimes.co.uk/article/three-…
The Labour leader will set out a £29bn plan today to prevent energy bills rising for six months, as polling indicates big majorities in favour of this idea and windfall taxes that Liz Truss’s team said would raise the risk of recession
Dozens of charities also warned yesterday that children would go hungry if ministers did not double their existing support package to cover energy bills
The US National Archives and Records Administration notified Congress in February that it had recovered about 15 boxes of White House documents from Trump’s Florida home, some of which contained classified material
The US House of Representatives oversight committee said at that time it was expanding an investigation into Trump’s actions and asked the archives to turn over additional information
Since the former Tory MP’s House of Commons porn scandal, many of us can’t look at farm vehicles in the same way. @camillalong meets him and his very understanding wife thetimes.co.uk/article/neil-p…
In April 2021, Parish was fiddling on his phone in the House of Commons. “I genuinely was looking at tractors,” he insists. When typing the tractor’s name into Google, one autocomplete suggestion was porn. “And I went into it,” he says
🗣️ “I have watched porn in the past. But not this type of stuff”.
Parish won’t say what type of tractor it was: “I’m not going there.” But it wasn’t a Dominator as rumoured, he says: the Dominator is a “combine — all right?”