* Many gas stations closed - Reuters reporters
* Is the UK in crisis? 'No', Johnson says
* Johnson says no 1970s-style crisis looms
* 127 drivers apply for fuel tanker visas - PM
(Recasts headline and lead)
By Guy Faulconbridge and Kate Holton
LONDON, Oct 5 (Reuters) - British Prime Minister Boris
Johnson denied on Tuesday that the world's fifth largest economy
was heading towards a 1970s-style inflationary spiral but
demanded that business kick a decades-long addiction to cheap
imported labour.
A post-Brexit shortage of workers exacerbated by the global
strains of the COVID crisis has sown chaos through supply chains
for everything from fuel and pork to poultry and bottled water,
raising concerns growth could be crimped.
Asked by BBC radio if the United Kingdom was in crisis,
Johnson said: "No."
"I think that on the contrary, what you are seeing with the
UK economy and indeed the global economy is very largely in the
supply chains the stresses and strains you would expect from a
giant waking up and that is what is happening," he said.
Johnson said businesses had to kick their addiction to cheap
imported labour.
"What you saw in the last 20 years or more, almost 25 years,
has been an approach whereby business of many kinds, was able to
mainline low wage, low cost, immigration for a very long time,"
Johnson said.
An air of chaos has gripped Britain in recent days as a
deficit of truckers left fuel pumps dry across the land, and a
spike in European wholesale natural gas prices tipped energy
companies into bankruptcy.
Reuters reporters said many gas stations remained closed on
Tuesday in London and across southern England.
BACK TO 1970S?
Johnson said Britain was not heading back to the 1970s when
inflation peaked at 22.6%, labour disputes brought the economy
to a standstill and the government had to borrow from the
International Monetary Fund during a sterling crisis.
Asked if the United Kingdom could suffer a repeat of the
inflationary spiral seen in the 1970s, Johnson said: "I don't
think that the problem will present itself in that way and I
think actually that this country's natural ability to sort out
its logistics and supply chains is very strong."
With fuel companies and supermarkets warning that a shortage
of drivers was hitting deliveries, the government said late last
month that it would temporarily reverse its immigration rules
and give 5,000 visas for EU drivers to operate in Britain.
It said 300 of those could arrive immediately to drive oil
tankers. Johnson said 127 drivers had applied.
"What that shows is the global shortage," he said.
The Times newspaper reported that just 27 fuel tanker
drivers had applied.
(Editing by Gareth Jones)