Tensions rise in UK haulage as surcharges see drivers playing ‘musical chairs’

The UK, with Brexit, has been one of the hardest hit nations with driver shortages. Here is some talk on the situation.

Apparently driver shortage surcharges are being added by some carriers, claiming all the money goes to drivers. Who believes that? Some think other carriers are also doing it but not calling it specifically for drivers. Any carrier may or may not be keeping the surcharge themselves, as there is no documentation of where it is going.

By Alexander Whiteman 26/08/2021

Tensions rise in UK haulage as surcharges see drivers playing ‘musical chairs’ – The Loadstar

CMA CGM startles rivals by vowing to stop spot rate increases for coming five months

The third largest liner firm just one-upped other container lines by announcing a freeze in spot rates.

Of course they are at an all-time high. And Hapag-Lloyd, a smaller liner firm, said they had ‘already frozen rates’. But it’s a great piece of publicity.

It is a bit like a car manufacturer saying they will freeze the price of a car at the MSRP (sticker price). No one tries to pay that anyway.

Sam Chambers September 10, 2021

CMA CGM startles rivals by vowing to stop spot rate increases for coming five months – Splash247

Some responses:

‘Firms undervaluing their drivers caused this shortage crisis across Europe’

Europe has much the same problem as the US when it comes to a driver shortage for logistics.

And the problem made it into consciousness for a similar reason– a new regulation that required drivers to take 45 hours of rest outside their truck, and other work rules. The rules were made for safety reasons, and they make a lot of sense.

But the effect was to prevent drivers from using extra hours to earn money from firms that pay too little. ‘Make it up on volume’ is possible only if you have enough hours to do it.

So drivers increasingly are simply walking away from driving jobs, or quitting and looking for jobs from those few companies that pay more fairly.

The speakers in the article make it plain that trucking firms themselves brought this shortage on, by not paying drivers fairly and not providing fair working conditions.

It’s much the same story in the US.

By Alex Whiteman 08/09/2021

‘Firms undervaluing their drivers caused this shortage crisis across Europe’ – The Loadstar