kuro68k wrote: » The British government is going to take it right to the cliff edge and hope that someone else compromises. Of course they have their excuses already lined up if no-one does, only real question is who they will blame.
J Mysterio wrote: » Not sure why you think you hold some moral high ground on this issue. Half of your contributions here consist of being personally offended by the contributions of others. Fact is, 95% of Irish people think Brexit is a bad idea. They are right.
funkey_monkey wrote: » https://www-thejournal-ie.cdn.ampproject.org/v/s/www.thejournal.ie/brexit-threat-food-shortages-ireland-4381228-Dec2018/?amp=1&_js_v=a2&_gsa=1&usqp=mq331AQHCAFYAYABAQ==#referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.com&_tf=From%20%251%24s Ireland is the most stable country in the world in terms of being able to provide food for its population. So, they are prepared to cause another famine to get Brexit! Words fail me.
MrMusician18 wrote: » The country wouldn't starve however, but choice would be limited with respect to today.
[Heidi Nordby] Lunde told the Guardian: “Really, the Norwegian option is not an option. We have been telling you this for one and a half years since the referendum and how this works, so I am surprised that after all these years it is still part of the grown-up debate in the UK. You just expect us to give you an invitation rather than consider whether Norway would want to give you such an invitation. It might be in your interest to use our agreement, but it would not be in our interest.”
Bit cynical wrote: » J Mysterio wrote: » Not sure why you think you hold some moral high ground on this issue. Half of your contributions here consist of being personally offended by the contributions of others. Fact is, 95% of Irish people think Brexit is a bad idea. They are right. I think it is not merely disagreement with Brexit. A lot of people don't respect the decision either. If they had their way, the UK would not be allowed to make such a decision.
MrMusician18 wrote: » While this is true, there almost certainly would be shortages of certain types of food and food products in the country in the event of a hard Brexit. You might not be able to find your Weetabix in the local supermarket, a hard Brexit would definitely see some empty shelves in supermarkets. The country wouldn't starve however, but choice would be limited with respect to today.
Enzokk wrote: » Surely the only products we would have a shortage with would be specialist British products that has British ingredients. Seems that you can find most other products with a different brand name from your friendly German supermarket that would surely be sourced from the continent, right?
CelticRambler wrote: » Meanwhile, Norway says "feck off ..."
cml387 wrote: It's transporting goods through the UK is the problem. Not actually getting them (though I imagine the UK would want to hoard their supplies of Marmite and Bovril to keep them going through the hard winter).
robinph wrote: » The biggest issue for Ireland would be the lorries and boats having to go the long way round from France, or setup a transport corridor along the lines for the Berlin airlift until some bigger/ faster boats and more planes/ runways are sorted out. Other than maybe losing out on fresh Jaffa Cakes I'm not sure Ireland will miss out on much that the UK supplies. Will just need the manufactures in the rest of Europe to stick stuff in boxes with English writing on rather than it currently being done for the UK market with a bit siphoned off for Ireland...or you all have to learn to read French/ German.
MrMusician18 wrote: » I'm fairly certain that key information (nutrition and ingredients) on labels is regulated and must be written in english to be sold here. It's not a matter of taking stock from the continent, it needs to be localised for us, which could be a problem if that work is done in the UK at the moment.
10000maniacs wrote: » There are more than 4,500 products routinely imported from Britain and the price of bread and cereals in the Republic could rise by up to 30 per cent in a hard Brexit scenario, while milk, cheese and egg prices could increase 46 per cent. A range of products – including meat, sugar, confectionery, coffee, tea and mineral water – are likely to increase by 20-30 per cent. The overall effect of these changes would increase the average cost of living for Irish households by 2-3.1 per cent, which, in cash terms. means an annual cost of €892-€1,360 per household.
listermint wrote: » Im actually not sure where you get your figures from ? Where do we import UK Milk from, besides processing our own stuff over the border.. And Cheese ?
10000maniacs wrote: » The ESRI published a research paper earlier this year on this, and I am just paraphrasing that paper.
EdgeCase wrote: » None of those assumptions on household costs take in the fact that retailers, wholesalers, distributors and customers will switch away from UK suppliers, supply chains and products. There'll be a short term impact here but I would be very surprised if it lingers. The market will react and also Irish government and European Union and also neighbouring countries governments are reacting.
ArmaniJeanss wrote: » I'd be wary of that article to be honest. Interviewing/quoting one or two politicians and business leaders and extrapolating that their opinion represents government policy is something we laugh at when the Express or Telegraph does it. So it's plausible that the Norwegians that the Guardian chose have as much relevance as Hans-Olaf Henkel or Ray Bassett who the Express love quoting.
ZeroThreat wrote: » Hmmm, I'd guess someone of Indian heritage would know quite a bit about the history of famine & food shortages in colonies under British rule.