Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Parle to hike prices, reduce quantity of biscuits in some packs as GST bites

- Deepti Govind deepti.g@livemint.com

BENGALURU: For nearly 80 years, Parle G has been a household name in biscuits and the key reason behind its success has been its ability to stick to its position as a mass brand.

That premise will be put to the test three months from now and could result in significan­t volume losses as Parle Products Pvt. Ltd reluctantl­y gears up to both reduce the number of biscuits in some Parle G stock-keeping units (SKUS) and hike prices outright on others.

Parle has been loathe to hike prices of its Parle G brand, and other biscuits including Marie that cost less than ₹100 per kg, even though the company has talked about doing so after goods and services tax (GST) was implemente­d last July.

“There are certain decisions which are irreversib­le because they are huge and everyone— including consumers—would take a hit,” said Mayank Shah, category head of biscuits at Parle. By May, the company’s revised pricing strategy for these lowerend brands ought to reflect on retail shelves.

In Parle G, for instance, the company sells its biscuits in various SKUS (pack sizes) that start from ₹2 and go up to ₹100. For SKUS that cost less than ₹10, it will not hike prices but will reduce the number of biscuits in each pack—mostly by one biscuit. In those that cost ₹10 and above, it will increase prices by 4% on average, Shah said.

GST rate on biscuits, at 18%, is much higher than the earlier 12% in value-added tax that companies had to pay. While that has not impacted the more premium segments of the biscuit market, it has hit the bottom end of the pyramid where Parle G operates.

After GST was implemente­d, the company initially talked about hiking prices of Parle G by March, according to a PTI report last year. That has now been pushed to May, and yet, there is hesitation.

The segment is so price-sensitive that knocking just one biscuit off a ₹2 pack, for instance, could impact sales to the tune of 30-50%, said Shah.

“It’s a risky propositio­n to reduce the quantity or size of an accepted mass brand at the same price. A marginal price increase may be still acceptable by the masses compared to a size and quantity reduction because people know that there will be a gradual price increase in everything,” said Sreedhar Prasad, partner and head of consumer markets at KPMG.

 ?? MINT/FILE ?? GST rate on biscuits, at 18%, is much higher than the earlier 12% in valueadded tax that companies had to pay
MINT/FILE GST rate on biscuits, at 18%, is much higher than the earlier 12% in valueadded tax that companies had to pay

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