Snapshot of Eurozone inflation falls to 5.5% in sharp contrast to UK. Economists put reason for divergence down to Brexit and Britain’s energy price guarantee.

  • sunbeam60
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    1 year ago

    Literally the first paragraph says “economists put it down to brexit”. But I’m sure you had enough of experts.

    • emerty@feddit.uk
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      1 year ago

      and Britain’s energy price guarantee

      And you’re ignoring the second half of the first paragraph?

      Why?

      • sunbeam60
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        1 year ago

        Not ignoring it. Of course there are other factors. But brexit is definitely a factor. Therefore: Brexit, the gift that keeps on giving.

        • emerty@feddit.uk
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          1 year ago

          Economists said most of the reason for the divergence between the UK and the EU was down to the UK government’s energy price guarantee (EPG), which has capped the cost of gas and electricity bills to the equivalent of £2,500 a year for a typical household until July. In the eurozone there have not been similar caps fixing the price over a lengthy time period, meaning their inflation rates better reflect the recent global decline in wholesale gas and electricity prices.

        • emerty@feddit.uk
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          1 year ago

          I work in agtech, brexit is a gift, it’s caused disruption that’s a great catalyst for investment in regenerative and vertical farming

          Problems are opportunities

          Wage growth is also high as a result of the labour squeeze that brexit is partially affecting

          • G4Z@feddit.uk
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            1 year ago

            That seems suitably vague.

            be specific, what can you do now that you couldn’t have done in the EU and why has that caused more investment that wouldn’t have happened anyway?

            • emerty@feddit.uk
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              1 year ago

              The CAP is an environmental disaster. The UK has now created its own agriculture policy that does not subsidise production. This was not possible whilst in the EU.

              • G4Z@feddit.uk
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                1 year ago

                So I suppose what you are saying is, now that the cost of food production has increased that’s made investments in these things more viable? Kind of sounds like some significant downsides for the other part of that equation. Not quite a Brexit benefit for the rest of us, just those in a specific VC funded R+D company.

                I also think… those investments could have still happened in the EU tbh, could and maybe should have been government funded research anyway, considering there is at least one large vertical farm company in Germany.

                Not really buying that as a benefit myself, but at least it is arguable!

                • emerty@feddit.uk
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                  1 year ago

                  No, the disruption to supply chains from covid and brexit have driven investment decisions to grow more in the UK and to use tech to replace low skill labour that wasn’t possible with FOM providing serfs to grub about in the dirt. Cheap labour is a barrier to tech. Modern slavery is a big issue in farming

                  The CAP was designed to deliver cheap food during conflict, it’s failed at the first real test.

                  The CAP takes the largest slice of the EU budget and the ‘modern’ farming it encourages have destroyed biodiversity and soil

                  Policy to fix this has failed miserably to the tune of our entire net contribution to the budget of 66b

                  https://www.arc2020.eu/cap-billions-spent-on-biodiversity-with-little-impact-auditors/

                  • G4Z@feddit.uk
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                    1 year ago

                    No, the disruption to supply chains from covid and brexit have driven investment decisions to grow more in the UK and to use tech to replace low skill labour that wasn’t possible with FOM providing serfs to grub about in the dirt. Cheap labour is a barrier to tech. Modern slavery is a big issue in farming

                    I agree, modern slavery is an issue as is paying these workers too little these are really domestic problems though which we still have thanks to the government farm worker visa scheme importing them from the RoW anyway. Germany and Finland both have FoM and they have 2 of the top vertical farm companies (one of them even has a project in Bedford apparently. So I don’t really see how they can do it in the EU, and somehow we couldn’t?

                    The CAP was designed to deliver cheap food during conflict, it’s failed at the first real test.

                    It was designed to ensure food security and nobody has gone hungry so that’s not really true is it.

                    The CAP takes the largest slice of the EU budget and the ‘modern’ farming it encourages have destroyed biodiversity and soil

                    Natural resources including CAP, CFP and any other rural and environmental measures so that’s not really true either is it? Also, even if you do include all that, it comes second to Growth projects (38% vs 47.01%)

                    Policy to fix this has failed miserably to the tune of our entire net contribution to the budget of 66b

                    Hasn;t Brexit already cost more than our total contributions over 47 years? We were close to that according to Forbes 3 years ago.

                    https://www.forbes.com/sites/niallmccarthy/2020/01/21/brexit-costs-close-to-matching-britains-total-eu-contributions-infographic/

                    So we’ve spent multiple times more than EU contributions would have been for the last few years to fix nothing, and stimulate an industry that is apparently already thriving within the EU.

                    Doesn’t sound like a Brexit benefit to me, it’s just loss after loss.

          • sunbeam60
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            1 year ago

            I’m happy to hear of a positive side effect of brexit. I’m not going to lie, I think it’s the first.