Brexit

Our best bits.

Should the United Kingdom remain a member of the European Union or leave the European Union?

Remain a member of the European Union
222
80%
Leave the European Union
57
20%
 
Total votes: 279
User avatar
captain red dog
Member
Joined in 2008
Location: Bristol, UK

PostRe: Brexit
by captain red dog » Mon Jul 10, 2017 12:54 pm

Well Justin King is just the sort of expert we need here. He did such a sterling job with Sainsbury's and Marussia F1 went from strength to strength.

User avatar
KK
Moderator
Joined in 2008
Location: Botswana
Contact:

PostRe: Brexit
by KK » Mon Jul 10, 2017 12:54 pm

I read a joke earlier about a Eura Tom, Uncle Tom, and Talking Tom walking into a bar...I've now forgotten the joke so you're going to have to create the punchline yourself.

Image
User avatar
Cuttooth
Emeritus
Joined in 2008

PostRe: Brexit
by Cuttooth » Mon Jul 10, 2017 1:20 pm

It's so hard not to spell it as Eurotom. :fp:

captain red dog wrote:Well Justin King is just the sort of expert we need here. He did such a sterling job with Sainsbury's and Marussia F1 went from strength to strength.

He was in charge of one of the biggest supermarkets for ten years, I think his thoughts on how supermarkets might have to be run hold a bit more weight than his thoughts on motor racing.

User avatar
Rex Kramer
Member
Joined in 2008

PostRe: Brexit
by Rex Kramer » Mon Jul 10, 2017 1:28 pm

captain red dog wrote:Well Justin King is just the sort of expert we need here. He did such a sterling job with Sainsbury's and Marussia F1 went from strength to strength.

Do we have other supermarket executive (or former) staff saying the opposite? Is he the lone voice of opposition? If not then surely it's difficult to determine how valid his concerns are (both positively or negatively).

bear
Member
Member
Joined in 2008

PostRe: Brexit
by bear » Mon Jul 10, 2017 1:29 pm

Lagamorph wrote:Once again proof that farmers were idiots voting against their own interests.

That bloke with 700 acres could well benefit. With a farm that large he'll probably survive a reduction in subsidies but smaller farms near him won't be viable so he'll be able to expand his farm for less than it'd cost him now. One major downside to the current subsidy setup is that it keeps land prices artificially high which makes it hard for farmers to buy land at a sensible price.

User avatar
Moggy
"Special"
Joined in 2008
AKA: Moggy

PostRe: Brexit
by Moggy » Mon Jul 10, 2017 3:43 pm

captain red dog wrote:Well Justin King is just the sort of expert we need here. He did such a sterling job with Sainsbury's and Marussia F1 went from strength to strength.


I don't know or care about F1, but he was at Sainsbury's for 10 years and left when they were announcing record breaking profits.

King joined Sainsbury’s from Marks & Spencer in 2004, with the retailer in crisis. Staff morale was at rock bottom as it leaked sales to Tesco and attempted to fill empty shelves, but over the past decade annual sales have grown by £10.3 billion to £26.4 billion.

http://www.standard.co.uk/business/busi ... 28745.html


Hardly a terrible job.

User avatar
Hexx
Member
Joined in 2008

PostRe: Brexit
by Hexx » Mon Jul 10, 2017 4:44 pm

twitter.com/faisalislam/status/884426407660707841



So we've gone from "we'll have better, if not the BEST, deals!" to "hopefully we can convince them to let us continue what we have now (for some reason)"

User avatar
Errkal
Member
Joined in 2011
Location: Hastings
Contact:

PostRe: Brexit
by Errkal » Mon Jul 10, 2017 4:45 pm

You know I dont think that is how it works.

User avatar
Moggy
"Special"
Joined in 2008
AKA: Moggy

PostRe: Brexit
by Moggy » Mon Jul 10, 2017 4:46 pm

Hexx wrote:

twitter.com/faisalislam/status/884426407660707841



So we've gone from "we'll have better, if not the BEST, deals!" to "hopefully we can convince them to let us continue what we have now (for some reason)"


Is that like how the SNP thought EU membership would carry over if they went independent? :slol:

User avatar
Hexx
Member
Joined in 2008

PostRe: Brexit
by Hexx » Mon Jul 10, 2017 4:46 pm

Moggy wrote:
Hexx wrote:

twitter.com/faisalislam/status/884426407660707841



So we've gone from "we'll have better, if not the BEST, deals!" to "hopefully we can convince them to let us continue what we have now (for some reason)"


Is that like how the SNP thought EU membership would carry over if they went independent? :slol:


She has been looking to other parties for ideas recently...

User avatar
Moggy
"Special"
Joined in 2008
AKA: Moggy

PostRe: Brexit
by Moggy » Mon Jul 10, 2017 4:48 pm

Hexx wrote:
Moggy wrote:
Hexx wrote:

twitter.com/faisalislam/status/884426407660707841



So we've gone from "we'll have better, if not the BEST, deals!" to "hopefully we can convince them to let us continue what we have now (for some reason)"


Is that like how the SNP thought EU membership would carry over if they went independent? :slol:


She has been looking to other parties for ideas recently...


...which might explain why Anne Marie Morris is using old school BNP language.

User avatar
BID0
Member
Joined in 2008
Location: Essex

PostRe: Brexit
by BID0 » Mon Jul 10, 2017 5:18 pm

The SNP thing makes more sense though. To retain the same status of a country in a club it is already in.

Rolling over trade deals though, I'm not sure these other countries would want to offer the same deals to a now small market just like that

User avatar
Garth
Emeritus
Joined in 2008
Location: Norn Iron

PostRe: Brexit
by Garth » Mon Jul 10, 2017 5:26 pm

Hexx wrote:

twitter.com/faisalislam/status/884426407660707841



So we've gone from "we'll have better, if not the BEST, deals!" to "hopefully we can convince them to let us continue what we have now (for some reason)"


That's some real wishful thinking there.

User avatar
Squinty
Member
Joined in 2009
Location: Norn Oirland

PostRe: Brexit
by Squinty » Mon Jul 10, 2017 5:28 pm

I'm convinced a little more everyday that there will be a second referendum near the end of these talks.

User avatar
Lagamorph
Member ♥
Joined in 2010

PostRe: Brexit
by Lagamorph » Mon Jul 10, 2017 9:25 pm

Squinty wrote:I'm convinced a little more everyday that there will be a second referendum near the end of these talks.

There seems to be an increasing feeling from MPs that Brexit isn't going to happen, though some of them see this as a bad thing because they're strawberry floating mentalists.

Lagamorph's Underwater Photography Thread
Zellery wrote:Good post Lagamorph.
Turboman wrote:Lagomorph..... Is ..... Right
User avatar
KK
Moderator
Joined in 2008
Location: Botswana
Contact:

PostRe: Brexit
by KK » Tue Jul 11, 2017 9:31 am

The Grocer Magazine wrote:The Brexit effect: 10 foods we're already paying more for

Ex-Sainsbury’s boss Justin King warned this week that shoppers are “completely in the dark” about what Brexit will mean for supermarkets, and should prepare themselves for “higher prices, less choice, and poorer quality” food and drink once the UK leaves the European Union.

Of course, the plunge in the pound since last June’s EU referendum vote means Brits won’t have to wait until Brexit to feel its impact on their shopping bill. Here is our list of 10 food and drink products that have already been hit by the “Brexit effect”.

Marmite

Tesco’s very public refusal to bow to Unilever’s demand for a 10% cost price increase sparked #Marmitegate last year, with Brits thrown into panic as the supermarket pulled the yeast extract from its shelves along with a raft of other products from the fmcg giant. At the time, the retailer insisted it would “always put its customers first” and claimed it had come to a satisfactory resolution in the trade dispute. But just seven months later it hiked Marmite prices.

Chocolate

Brits were still recovering from the shock of Marmitegate when it emerged Mondelez had chopped 11 triangles from its 400g and 170g Toblerone SKUs as a cost-saving measure. The manufacturer has since hiked prices on Freddo chocolate bars by 20%, with SKUs from rival Mars also falling victim to price hikes and shrinkflation in recent months.

Bananas

Last November, Asda hiked its price for a kilo of bananas 68p to 72p, with Tesco, Sainsbury’s and Waitrose following soon afterwards. It was the first price hike in the mults on the SKU - which had become an important front in the supermarket price wars - for two years. Waitrose is now selling a kilo for 75p, while Tesco recently ramped up its price for a bag of five bananas, with both retailers citing rising import costs.

Meat & Poultry

The mults started hiking prices for fresh meat and poultry in January, just six months after the Brexit vote. Some of the biggest price rises were on bestselling SKUs such as a large whole chicken, half a leg of lamb and a pack of beef mince. Experts warned it was just the first of a tranche of price increases set to hit the category over the next year.

Olive oil

In what was unquestionably bad news for the new year health kick, supermarket prices for olive oil surged in January amid warnings Brexit and bad harvests had conspired to push up global prices for the commodity to record levels. Further price hikes are likely, suppliers have warned, with tight supplies and the plunging pound keeping import costs high.

Doritos

PepsiCo slashed the size of sharing bags of Doritos from 200g to 180g in April, while supermarket prices for the corn-based snack remained the same at £1.99 on average. At the time, the manufacturer said “fluctuating foreign exchange rates” had pushed up the cost of ingredients and materials, forcing it to “make a few changes to certain Doritos packs”.

Smoked salmon

Tesco hiked prices across a range of salmon SKUs - including own-label smoked salmon - last month, following a similar move by rival Sainsbury’s in the face of surging wholesale prices. Average supermarket prices for salmon are now up 15% year on year, and the Norwegian Seafood Council warns further price increases could be on the way as the weakness in the pound adds upward pressure to a commodity already hit by supply problems.

Peperami

Peperami fell victim to Brexit-driven shrinkflation in April, when the meaty snack was trimmed down from 25g to 22.5g, while the rsp remained the same at 79p for a single stick, £1.59 for a pack of three and £2.50 for a 5-pack. A spokeswoman for the brand blamed “rising commodity costs and foreign exchange pressure” due to “significant currency fluctuations” in the wake of the Brexit vote.

Weetabix

Weetabix CEO Giles Turrell warned in January that the cereal brand might have to increase cost prices for its products due to the surge in the price of British wheat since last year’s referendum. By March, a 42-pack of Weetabix was 7% more expensive than last year at £2.39 after price increases by Asda and Morrisons, while a 600g pack of Weetabix Minis Banana was up 12% on average to £2.50.

Richmond Sausages

Kerry Foods cut pack sizes across its iconic sausage brand last month, citing the “long-term rise in the price of pork” since the Brexit vote. The brand’s 16-pack of Thick Sausages was reduced to 14 sausages (rsp: £3.50), while packs of Richmond Skinless Sausages were cut by 50g to 426g (rsp: £1.78 in Asda/£2 in Sainsbury’s and Tesco).

Booze

Supermarket prices for spirits have surged since the Brexit vote, research by The Grocer revealed in March, after supplier Pernod Ricard blamed cost price increases for its champagne and spirits brands on the plunging pound. Retail prices are also rising for mainstream beer brands from the major brewers such as Heineken, whose mass delisting by Tesco earlier this year was allegedly the result of a post-Brexit price spat with the retailer.

We'll just gloss over that there's actually 11...

Image
User avatar
Knoyleo
Member
Joined in 2008

PostRe: Brexit
by Knoyleo » Tue Jul 11, 2017 9:44 am

KK wrote:Olive oil

In what was unquestionably bad news for the new year health kick, supermarket prices for olive oil surged in January

How is liquid fat being more expensive a bad thing for those on a diet? Use less oil, consume fewer calories.

pjbetman wrote:That's the stupidest thing ive ever read on here i think.
User avatar
KK
Moderator
Joined in 2008
Location: Botswana
Contact:

PostRe: Brexit
by KK » Tue Jul 11, 2017 9:52 am

Olive oil is supposedly the healthiest substance to cook with; coconut oil being the worst.

Image
User avatar
Eighthours
Emeritus
Emeritus
Joined in 2008
Location: Bristol

PostRe: Brexit
by Eighthours » Tue Jul 11, 2017 9:54 am

KK wrote:Olive oil is supposedly the healthiest substance to cook with; coconut oil being the worst.


'Healthiest' in terms of your overall glow, but certainly not best for your weight loss! There is a ridiculous amount of fat content in olive oil, it's incredibly bad for you.

But roast potatoes cooked in a fair helping of olive oil = strawberry floating YES.

User avatar
KK
Moderator
Joined in 2008
Location: Botswana
Contact:

PostRe: Brexit
by KK » Tue Jul 11, 2017 9:55 am

Well you've got to cook with something, I suppose. Mediterian diet and all that malarky.

Image

Return to “Archive”

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 434 guests