15 January 2024

Treasurer is turning his attention to supermarket price gouging

| Chris Johnson
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Treasurer Jim Chalmers says supermarkets must pass on lower prices to customers. Photo: Region.

Federal Treasurer Jim Chalmers has put supermarkets on notice, saying they should be passing on price drops in produce to their customers.

As new Treasury analysis was released this week showing wages are growing, but individuals and families are struggling to make ends meet in the current economic climate, Dr Chalmers said the big supermarkets had a role to play.

“We are concerned that when the price for meat and fruit and vegetables at the farm gate goes down, we want to see the price of those goods go down on the supermarket shelves as well,” he said.

“We’ve said that for some time when the price of meat and fruit and veggies comes down for supermarkets, it should come down for families as well.

“This is why we’re having a fresh look at the grocery code. It’s why we’re having a fresh look at our competition laws: we want to make sure that people who are already doing it tough enough get a fair go in the aisles of our supermarkets right around Australia.

“And we have said that before, if the supermarkets are buying it cheaper, they should be selling it cheaper, too. This is of concern to us.”

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The Treasurer said he was in regular contact with the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) Chair Gina Cass-Gottlieb about the issue and is looking to determine if action should be taken.

“If further steps are necessary, we will obviously consider them. I think from memory, I’m speaking with her again this week and this is a fairly regular topic of conversation, how we make sure that we’ve got the monitoring arrangements right,” Dr Chalmers said.

“The ACCC monitors prices right across the economy. We want to make sure that that monitoring is right so that people get a fair go.

“But when the price of meat and fruit and veggies goes down for the supermarkets to buy, it should go down for families and pensioners to buy as well.”

While the Federal Government is reviewing the supermarket code of conduct, a Senate inquiry sparked by the Greens is also set to examine price gouging by Coles and Woolworths.

Hearings will begin early in the parliamentary year.

The Federal Opposition, however, says the government must do more.

Nationals leader David Littleproud has called for an ACCC investigation into food price mark-ups he has described as “extraordinary”.

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The Treasurer tried to talk up wages growth as an answer to cost-of-living pressures and as a sign of the government’s handling of the economy.

“There is no better way to help people make ends meet than to make sure that we’ve got wages growing again in our economy after a decade of wage stagnation,” he said.

“The new Treasury analysis … shows wages are growing at their fastest pace in 15 years and lowest-paid workers are getting the biggest boosts in pay.

“Wages growth overall in the period we’ve released the numbers about today was 4 per cent overall, but it was 6.7 per cent for the lowest paid and 5 per cent for the second lowest categories.

“What this shows is we’re getting wages moving again overall in our economy, but we are prioritising people on the lowest pay who need the most help.

“We want people who work hard to be able to provide for their loved ones and get ahead and for too long in this country, that was too hard.

“Real wages were falling by something like 3.4 per cent at the election. We’ve seen a couple of quarters now of real wages growth. We want to see more of that.

“Wages growth is absolutely central to our cost-of-living plan, and these new numbers show that we’re making welcome and encouraging progress. But we’ve got much more work to do throughout the course of 2024.”

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Oooh – exciting – shots across the bow. Now we’ll get the media stenography in circa 10 days around how prices are high because of organised shoplifting gangs.

Capital Retro1:21 pm 11 Jan 24

That article has really hurt the true believers. No one is defending it.

It was one of many failed Rudd initiatives. Another was the NBN which still hasn’t been connected by fibre optics to parts of Tuggeranong.

@Hidden Dragon
Given the age of that article (29 June 2009), HD, there may even be Elvis sightings. Is there a point to your post?

@Capital Retro
… and in 2013 after the election of the Abbott government, the former Labor communications minister Stephen Conroy conceded that the initial rollout plans were ‘too ambitious’ and that there were delays in implementation.

Shortly after, the (then) new Coalition government Communications Minister, Malcolm Turnbull, announced that the NBN would be delivered using a mix of old and new technology, a Multi-Technology Mix, stating that it would allow significant savings and earlier completion to the approach chosen by the Gillard and Rudd governments.

So after 10 years in government, the Coalition couldn’t deliver NBN to parts of Tuggeranong, but of course, according to you, that’s still the fault of Kevin Rudd. Yeah … nah!

So, the usual suspects who complain about inactivity of the government on cost of living pressures, are now complaining about the fact that they are going to have a look at price gouging and profiteering on supermarket goods. You could line these perrennial complainers up on a fence and they could all squawk in unison.

Maybe a committee to report back in 18 months

GrumpyGrandpa12:44 pm 10 Jan 24

We’ve had supply issues; fires and floods. These will be factored into this review, although when bananas are $3.99 a kilo at every supermarket and never move from that price, something is a bit smelly.

But its not just the supermarkets, walk into any McDonalds and look at their prices. They make Coles and Woolies look like Church Alter-boys.

If the Supermarket’s Gross Profit has increased faster than their Cost of Goods Sold, then they have increased their margins and are lining their pockets.
If these ratios are constant, then look at the wholesalers?

I’m not sure whether the government has the powers to seek evidence from private companies, such as Aldi and privately owned wholesalers?

Sadly, I think it’s just a PR exercise and I’m guessing the outcome of the review will be due just before the next election, but before any “action” can be taken.
Even then, apart from naming and shaming, I don’t any government is going to regulate the free market, unless there is proven corruption.

@Grumpy Grandpa
I heard an interview with a representative of primary food producers earlier today and he welcomed the investigation, as he said the prices of the various fresh goods in supermarkets did not reflect at all the price the farmers are receiving.
I hope it’s not a PR exercise as there’s certainly anecdotal evidence that supermarkets, especially the larger ones, are engaging in profiteering.
As you say, there may be little the government can actually do to bring down prices in a free market economy, but I’m not understimating the power of naming and shaming.

The Treasurer has been activated. Wow, he’s like a diesel generator that fires up as redundancy to a power outage. He is available, but used rarely

Capital Retro12:07 pm 10 Jan 24

Hello, the price of diesel is still around $2 a litre. Electricity price increases to fund Bowen’s renewable dream just around the corner. This government could not run a sausage sizzle and now they are getting Craig Emerson to run an inquiry?

God help us.

Craig Emerson proves puppets can be lifelike

@Capital Retro
Fortunately, CR, Seselja has been punted from the political arena, so god has nothing to do with it.

Capital Retro1:58 pm 10 Jan 24

That’s pretty lame JS, even for you.

Coming fromyou, the artisan of lame comments, Cr, I’ll take your recognition as a compliment.

Capital Retro10:41 am 11 Jan 24

Who could forget this (apart from the left media): https://youtu.be/L1pEt7bgY2U

@Capital Retro
Obviously a very forgettable moment, CR … so are you suggesting that because Dr Emerson can’t sing, he is not qualified to undertake this investigation?

Capital Retro12:12 pm 11 Jan 24

No wonder Julia Gillard gave him the flick.

Basic buck passing. Government caused the current economic malaise. It was the obvious and predictable consequence of lockdowns and printing $400 billion dollars.

GrumpyGrandpa2:33 pm 10 Jan 24

Hi TheSilver,
It might be an inconvenient truth for many partisan commentators, but when in Opposition, Albo was pushing to extend JobSeeker payments beyond what the Morrison government was offering.

Regardless, of who was in power, both would have created a mountain of debt, because no government was going to let hospitals collapse under the weight of Covid;

pre-vaccine or not support the economy. They made the right call, except for Morrison not requiring companies to increased their profits to repay their JobSeeker payments.

one’s political colours, there comes a time when the incumbent government needs to stop blaming the previous government for it’s woes and

Hey, I’m all for imprisoning the previous government’s ministry and firing the entire staff of the TGA, Health Department and Department of Home Affairs. I am completely non-partisan in my hatred of politicians and public servants.

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