Originally posted by Yorkie62
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Reply to: UK industrial production
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Previously on "UK industrial production"
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Originally posted by DaveB View PostNope, cos imports from the EU are already Tariff Free. Business as usual.
Car in particular attract 10% tariff
but car parts are 0%
So all you have to do to save a few quid on your new car is import it in kit form.
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Originally posted by original PM View Post
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Originally posted by Yorkie62 View PostO ye of little Brexit faith
Brexit is a Tory problem, concocted by Tories to keep the Tory party together. It was never good for the UK, however there could have been some element of risk control and damage limitation. Now, however, the world sees us in a different light; we're incompetent and not to be trusted in negotiations. How do you think that is going to pan out when we try to set up all those future FTAs?
The worry is the WA is only stage 1 .... we haven't even got to the true negotiations yet.
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Originally posted by original PM View Post
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Originally posted by original PM View Post
What they are worrying about is the open Northern Ireland border.
What the U.K. is worrying about, is that 87% of our imports might be tariff-free, but 100% of our exports will be subject to tariffs (excluding the Faroe Islands and Switzerland, so far).
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Originally posted by Whorty View PostYou're in the wrong thread ...... you want this one with comments like that https://www.contractoruk.com/forums/...okes-here.html
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Originally posted by Yorkie62 View PostThat is exactly why the figures are as they are
We are stockpiling instead of producing
Once we've finished stockpiling everything will return to normal
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Originally posted by Yorkie62 View PostYou see these are the issues you have when you don't have a multi-skilled mobile workforce and you let the unions in with their demarcation.
There’s a number of reasons for it, I guess. Roles are contained so each individual is an expert in their area, rather than a generalist. Segregation of duties so there is only limited access to certain transactions and warehouse areas.
It does make it more difficult for testing, I need a person from each area to cover planning, procurement, logistics, manufacturing, instead of just one generalist....
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Originally posted by BlasterBates View PostLatest industrial production figures are out. Can anyone else see a pattern developing ?
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None of this will matter anyway, as once the zero rate tariffs come in and we get unregulated imports via the Irish border we'll be flooded with all the cheap poor quality knockoffs we could wish for and we wont need to produce anything anyway.
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Originally posted by meridian View PostAh. No, that’s not how it works in most major warehouses and factories. Production staff are production staff, logistics staff are logistics staff. Skills are different, systems access is different.
Eg we’ve bought a new warehouse for stockpiling. Our project is extended to cover warehouse configuration and interfaces. Production increases slightly to cover the extra FGs required. Extra contract logistics staff are recruited to move the additional stock into the new warehouse.
Once we finish stockpiling, the extra logistics staff are retained to cover goods movements in and out of the new warehouse, until the warehouse is no longer required.
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