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Archived press release

 


Call for New Investigation into Big Four Supermarkets

26 November 2004

The Office of Fair Trading (OFT) is today (Friday 26th) being asked by a range of groups representing, consumers, farmers, small suppliers, small shops and environmental interests to open a new investigation of supermarket domination of the grocery market. The application for a full OFT Market Review into the grocery sector highlights the damaging impacts of market concentration on small stores, on farmers and on consumer choice. The groups will also ask the OFT not to approve any further takeovers of convenience stores by the biggest four supermarkets (Tesco, Asda, Sainsbury & Morrisons) whilst the market study is being carried out.

Friends of the Earth (FOE), The Association of Convenience Stores (ACS), the National Federation of Women's Institutes (NFWI) and FARM have put together an application for a full OFT market review into the grocery sector setting out how:

Market consolidation is having damaging impacts on the local economy of communities across the UK

The application says that changes in the market since the last review of supermarket in 2000, and the lack of action from the competition authorities, make a new review of the market essential. Under the Enterprise Act (2002) interested parties are entitled to raise concerns about particular markets and request a Market Study [2].

Friends of the Earth's Supermarket Campaigner Sandra Bell said

"The domination of the grocery market by the biggest supermarkets has been allowed to increase, unchecked, since the last investigation over four years ago. The Office of Fair Trading has so far turned a deaf ear on concerns about loss of small shops, bullying of suppliers and erosion of consumer choice. As consumers, we are in danger of losing any choice over where we shop, and environmental and social standards are under threat as supermarket suppliers are forced to cut costs."

ACS Chief Executive David Rae said:

"This application for a market review has brought together a range of organizations who share a concern for the future of a UK grocery market which is increasingly dominated by a handful of big players. The Big Four superstores achieve buying terms that force our members to drive down their own margins in order to compete. The superstores have undertaken predatory below cost selling which drives out smaller competitors. The UK is extraordinarily liberal in its approach to the grocery market, and this application aims to question what the Government and competition authorities want the market to look like in years to come, and to take action now to arrest the decline in diversity and consumer choice that is taking place in neighbourhoods and villages throughout the country."

The submission also highlights the failure of existing measures, including the supermarket code of practice which make the need for a market review even more urgent.

NFWI Chairman Barbara Gill said:

"The unfair practices of the biggest supermarkets are continuing unabated to the detriment of farmers and consumers. There is a real need for a code of conduct and supermarket watchdog to prevent the big multiples pushing small independent stores out of business and abusing their purchasing power by driving prices below their natural level. There is also a need for a wider investigation of the whole grocery market which has become much more concentrated over the last few years"

Issues included in the submission are:

[1] www.foe.co.uk/resource/evidence/proposal_for_a_market_stud.pdf (PDF format)

[2] If the OFT decides to conduct a study the issues it will look into include; impacts on consumers; barriers to entry into the market and lack of innovation in the market. It may suggest solutions or it may refer the issues to the Competition Commission for a fuller investigation.


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For further information please contact the Friends of the Earth media team on 020 7566 1649.

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