... A FORUM TO STIMULATE DEBATE ... ... JUST ADD A COMMENT AT ANY ENTRY BELOW... ... FOR THE SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT OF TOWN AND VALLEY ...

Tuesday 7 February 2017

Brexit: and free trade in lettuce

A couple of months ago, an editorial in the Telegraph gave its readers a reminder:
Free trade is good. Both China and Donald Trump should remember that

This week, we have been further reminded:

What is causing the 2017 vegetable shortage and what does it mean for consumers?

3 FEBRUARY 2017 

This matters because the UK imports more vegetables from Spain than any other country. More than 25pc of all of Britain’s vegetable imports came from Spain in 2015, according to data from the International Trade Centre. Of that, Spain provided more than 60pc of cabbages, cauliflowers and lettuce.

What is causing the 2017 vegetable shortage and what does it mean for consumers?


Why the shortage of veggies in UK shops? Lettuce find out.

February 03, 2017

It's like a throwback to WWII, when Britons were forced to ration their food.

Suppliers have warned that if the weather does not improve in coming weeks, the shortage may continue through March — meaning customers could be hit with higher prices for the produce.

Add to that anxiety about the expected fallout from Brexit, when Britain withdraws from the European Union.

"Although this [shortage] is attributed directly to the weather, it could be a taste for the future," Hornak says. "In Britain, we're used to having free trade with the rest of Europe, that's the basic privilege we have as part of the European Union. But, no one knows what the conditions for trade will be when Britain leaves the European Union. So, I think people are worried that this could be a forewarning of what we should get used to."


Why the shortage of veggies in UK shops? Lettuce find out. | Public Radio International

Some might welcome the Blitz spirit - and even the opportunity to grow our own:
Futures Forum: Empty shelves give food for thought...

The Adam Smith Institute thinks differently:





"Buy Local" Is a Slogan for Starvation

Tim  Worstall
In Vanuatu, they’re taking that hippie mantra of only eating locally seriously. “A group of South Pacific islands,” reports the Guardian, “are banning foreign junk food imports in favour of an all-local, organic diet as a way to combat future health problems.”
To which we must contrast the desperate straits facing us here in the UK, where the great European vegetable crisis of 2017 has led supermarkets to ration lettuce.
As an actual mode of general organization, we’ve stopped doing it and for very good reason: people used to starve.


Tesco, the UK’s largest retailer, posted signs on its salad sections which state: “Due to continued weather problems in Spain, there is a shortage on iceberg lettuce. To protect the availability for all our customers, we are limiting bulk purchases to three per person. We apologise for any inconvenience.”
First World problems indeed. Fortunately, lettuce is being airlifted in from the US – a rather expensive thing to do, but needs must be met.
For many people in the West, the fact that we import so much food is a moral, ethical and geopolitical outrage. Think of the air miles! Think of the carbon emissions! Think of the danger if ever we get blockaded!
It’s a romantic notion, to be sure. Buying our food in local markets and chatting to the people who grow it. Using glasshouses and south-facing walls to grow our own grapes – which, as Adam Smith pointed out, you can theoretically do even in Scotland.
Of course, a local diet would mean that at this time of year, our plates would be heavy with turnips, just as those of Vanuata will soon be heaving with taro. Months of turnips, in fact.
As an option – for those who can afford it – I’ve got nothing against local food for local people. But as an actual mode of general organization, we’ve stopped doing it and for very good reason: people used to starve.
Up into the 17th century, Britain used to suffer famine – the real swollen-bellies, children-dropping-dead type. What stopped it was the spread of an efficient transport system. It’s notable that the places where famines persisted even into the 18th century – the more remote parts of Cumbria and Northumberland – were the places that got hooked up to the transport network last. The cure for hunger was being able to bring in food from elsewhere.
Food security isn’t created by growing food here. It’s created by having many sources of supply.


Even today, it’s entirely normal for crops to fail – which is what’s happening in Spain right now. But because we get our food from all manner of places, the result of the rain in Spain is mild inconvenience. And just consider the effect in Spain itself if it relied solely on local production for the daily calories of the population.
Food security isn’t created by growing food here. It’s created by having many sources of supply, spread across different locations and thus subject to different weather patterns. It makes sense to get our wine from Bordeaux, rather than growing it in Scotland. But it makes equal sense to have Australia, New Zealand, Chile and all the rest for variety and security.
The current system also, as these news stories makes obvious, gain access to lettuce in the middle of winter – what the food writer Joanna Blythman calls “permanent global summertime” (though she doesn’t much like it).
That’s something that wasn’t possible, or at least normal, even in the childhoods of many reading this. Eating locally means eating seasonally – which has its merits, certainly, not least that sense of anticipation as the strawberries come into season. But given that we all do buy lettuce, courgettes etc in winter, it’s also equally obvious that we prefer not having to subsist on turnips.
Economists are keen on the idea of revealed preference. To determine what people prefer, don’t believe what people say to those wielding clipboards: look at what they actually do. Once you do that, it is clear that we prefer those temples of a varied diet, the supermarkets – with their choices, their fancy foreign muck and yes, even their food miles.
The reason we do so is as Cormac O’Grada has pointed out in his history of famine. In normal times, the global trade in food provides us with variety. And in extremis, that trade stops us starving.
All of which is what makes the local food movement such a puzzle. Why are people trying to insist on the very form of food production that we’ve just spent the last 10,000 years trying to escape?
Republished from CapX.

"Buy Local" Is a Slogan for Starvation | Foundation for Economic Education
.
.
.

No comments: