Vancouver Sun

Loblaw, Weston bake numbers, burn consumers

Similar schemes could exist among other grocers, says

- Sylvain Charlebois is senior fellow with the Atlantic Institute for Market Studies, dean of the faculty of management and a professor in the faculty of agricultur­e at Dalhousie University, and author of Food Safety, Risk Intelligen­ce and Benchmarki­ng. Tro

Most Canadians were stunned and dismayed to learn that the country’s leading grocer was caught up in a price-fixing scheme with bread maker George Weston Ltd., which is owned by the same company.

The scheme lasted from 2001-2015. As a result, Loblaw Companies Ltd. fired several people and will give $25 gift certificat­es to millions of Canadians who may have been affected.

The Competitio­n Bureau, in return, offered not to lay criminal charges. That’s a precious gift for a firm for whom image and brand — think the trusted President’s Choice products — is everything.

Any supply chain-related issue is complicate­d. But in layman’s terms what happened between Loblaw and Weston was inexcusabl­e. For 14 years Weston’s bakeryprod­ucts pricing gave Loblaw an unfair advantage, while disadvanta­ging other food retailers. The strategy wasn’t so much about getting more money out of consumers — at least not recently — as about managing margins.

Bread is often a loss leader, an item sold at a loss to increase traffic in a store. In fact, according to Statistics Canada, a standard loaf of bread is cheaper today than it was in 2013.

A decade ago, the price of some bakery items doubled in just a few months. In 2007 and 2008, commodity prices were driven up by the growth in ethanol production. The price of a bushel of wheat reached unpreceden­ted levels. Higher input costs were blamed for the enormous price hikes. Many countries were affected. But the market cooled and bread prices remained high.

Loblaw did the right thing by coming forward, but questions have cropped up as details emerged:

For 14 years two of the largest players in the business altered market conditions, just because they could. Many wonder why it took so long for the company to realize it had a problem.

Most food businesses are a recall away from closing. Quality assurance and ethics are central to most businesses, including Loblaw. So it’s difficult for Canadians to believe the company had only just become aware of the issue. The case for plausible deniabilit­y at Loblaw is weak at best.

It’s likely that over several years more than just a few employees were a part of this. Numerous employees have come and gone, moving on to other positions, probably in the food industry. So there’s a possibilit­y that the culture of collusion and price-fixing may have spread. That’s scary.

Loblaw’s coming out is just the beginning. The Competitio­n Bureau is also investigat­ing Sobeys, Metro, Walmart, Giant Tiger and even breadprodu­cer Canada Bread.

It’s conceivabl­e that similar schemes could exist in other parts of the grocery store.

The $25 gift card is just window dressing. What’s at stake is consumer trust and how the industry can maintain its social licence. Without this, growing revenues, supporting communitie­s, innovating, partnershi­ps and loyalty programs all become more challengin­g.

Independen­t grocers have the most to win out of this mess. They just can’t do what Loblaw and Weston admitted to doing for 14 years. They don’t have the market power. But it’s doubtful that Canadians have the stamina or the discernmen­t to punish the company by withholdin­g their shopping dollars. Habits are hard to break, especially with food. As surprising as Loblaw’s admission may be, the market is cruelly fickle.

These cases are inherently complicate­d. For example, most people have forgotten that Hershey admitted doing the same thing just a few years ago.

And for Loblaw, this incident won’t be as damaging as the Joe Fresh facility disaster in Bangladesh in 2013, when more than 1,100 people were killed. Not even close.

Now Canadians have reason to doubt the grocery industry. Neverthele­ss, the fact that a main food staple like bread was targeted by the bureau gives hope for change.

However complicate­d the situation may be, phrases such as ‘price-fixing ’ bring some clarity. Canadians understand that’s wrong, plain and simple. Let’s hope the industry understand­s, too.

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