International | Flying blind

Covid-19 has stymied governments’ efforts to collect data

But the pandemic may spur innovation, too

IN EARLY JUNE Britain’s long-suffering Europhiles got a rare taste of Schadenfreude. Tim Martin, a forthright Brexiteer who is the boss of J.D. Wetherspoon, a chain of pubs, announced that Britain ought to create a more liberal immigration policy to allow more Europeans to move there to work. Over the past 18 months hundreds of thousands of European immigrants, many of whom worked in pubs and restaurants and lost their jobs when everything closed during covid-19 lockdowns, have gone home. Brexit means that many cannot return. He denies it, but Mr Martin’s establishments are almost certainly suffering from the staff shortages afflicting the rest of the British hospitality industry.

This article appeared in the International section of the print edition under the headline “Flying blind”

Power and paranoia: The Chinese Communist Party at 100

From the June 26th 2021 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from International

An illustration showing a couple holding a baby together. Through a window behind them a woman can be seen in a hospital bed and a doctor is closing the blinds.

As adoptions collapse, demand for international surrogacy is soaring

Yet it is facing a growing backlash from religious conservatives and some feminists

An illustration of Donald Trump and Xi Jinping sitting at a table carving up a globe on a plate.

A big, beautiful Trump deal with China?

Washington hawks puzzle over calls for China to help in Ukraine, and hints of a possible TikTok reprieve


An illustration of a plug and a socket separated but a fence with barbed wire.

Why don’t more countries import their electricity? 

The economics make sense, but the geopolitics are nerve-racking


Trump unmasks American selfishness, say cynics

But sceptics are wrong to call America First business as usual

Inside the Houthis’ moneymaking machine

After a ceasefire in Gaza, they may continue their Red Sea racket

Marco Rubio will find China is hard to beat in Latin America

China buys lithium, copper and bull semen, and doesn’t export its ideology