Business

In Pics – Supermarket stackers valiantly try to hide lack of stock

The boss of the Food and Drink Federation has said that the days when UK consumers could expect to pick up nearly whatever product they want whenever they want from supermarket shelves are over.

Ian Wright, the body’s chief executive, said that a shortage of lorry drivers is in part due to them moving to online retailers and starting to deliver for Amazon and Tesco.

These jobs often have better hours and pay, he added.

The farm to fork supply chain is missing around half a million of the four million people that usually work in the sector.

Part of this will have come from EU nationals leaving the UK amid the pandemic and Brexit, he said.

Many businesses have reported huge issues in their supply chains in recent months, leaving some shop shelves empty, or forcing restaurants to remove items from their menus.

“It’s going to get worse, and it’s not going to get better after getting worse any time soon,” Mr Wright told listeners at an event organised by the Institute for Government.

He added: “The result of the labour shortages is that the just-in-time system that has sustained supermarkets, convenience stores and restaurants – so the food has arrived on shelf or in the kitchen, just when you need it – is no longer working.

“And I don’t think it will work again, I think we will see we are now in for permanent shortages. Now these shortages don’t mean that you’re going to run out of food.”

Trying to fill shelves

Well some creative stacking disguises nearly empty shelves at Morrisons in Kirkstall, Leeds, captured on Sept 10th.

Creative stacking disguises nearly empty shelves at Morrisons in Kirkstall, Leeds, September 10 2021. Credit;SWNS

Creative stacking disguises nearly empty shelves at Morrisons in Kirkstall, Leeds, September 10 2021. Credit;SWNS

Related: UK faces ‘winter of discontent’ due to ‘sorry saga’ of Brexit

SWNS

This content was supplied for The London Economic Newspaper by SWNS news agency.

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