Fri. Nov 22nd, 2024
Occasional Digest - a story for you

At Australia’s annual Christmas lunch the biggest slice of pie will again go to Coles and Woolworths, and while a new inquiry looks set to examine their profit margins, New Zealand offers a lesson in just how difficult it is to disrupt a duopoly.

The companies that own Australia’s major supermarkets posted billion-dollar profits this year, prompting calls for a Christmas boycott. Grassroots activists even launched a guerilla campaign inside some of their stores.

Now, the Greens look to have won support for a Senate inquiry into whether the two major supermarkets are engaging in price gouging, ultimately examining whether the situation is fair for consumers.

Across the ditch, New Zealand has an even tighter grocery sector, with no Aldi or IGA, and the duopoly there has also faced allegations of price gouging. 

The New Zealand competition watchdog has already held a market study into why food costs so much in Aotearoa and established a grocery commissioner to help implement its recommendations.

But 18 months down the line, Kiwis are still reporting their grocery bill as a major financial concern — for the first time, some families are struggling with the cost of putting food on the table.

Based on this experience, advocacy group Consumer NZ said an inquiry could be helpful to establish the facts around whether or not supermarket giants were making more than what was fair. 

But they warned the process was slow, and ultimately if it did not lead to bold changes, the business of selling food to Australians was likely to continue being a very closed, and expensive, shop. 

Senator calls for price freeze on ham

Australia’s Agriculture Minister Murray Watt attempted to address the cost-of-eating crisis by calling for a price freeze on Christmas ham.

“Hands off our ham. We know many Australians look forward to a Christmas ham and I want to make sure they’re not paying too much at the check out,” he said.  

“Presents for the kids, fuel to get to the other side of town to see your parents, fresh seafood as well as drinks — the cost of Christmas can really add up.”

But a leg of ham is a luxury item for many families. Presents and fresh seafood? Beyond reach. 

The cost of living — and the cost of the food required to live well — is not a Christmas issue. 

It is an ongoing crisis that, according to Foodbank, is the number one reason why 23 per cent of Australian households cannot send every member to bed with a full stomach all year round.

Mr Watt told the ABC that by telling the supermarkets ‘hands off our ham’ he was sending a message “that they should not profiteer off Australians during this time, particularly as cost-of-living pressures are hitting home”.

“I’ve been making clear for a couple of months now that the retailers should start dropping their prices, to reflect the reduction in prices farmers are getting at the farmgate.

“And I’m really pleased to see that some retailers have begun to cut the price of red meat, but we need to see more.”

Coles and Woolworths have both insisted prices will not rise as Christmas approaches, and both have said ham will hold at $8 a kilo. 

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