Malta Independent

EP accepts MEP Alex Agius Saliba’s request to investigat­e Maltese monopolies in food retail

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The Petitions Committee within the European Parliament has approved a petition presented by Labour MEP Alex Agius Saliba which calls on the European Commission to investigat­e whether the mechanisms of defacto monopolies are leading to artificial­ly higher prices in the food retail sector in Malta.

Agius Saliba’s petition was approved by all groups in the European Parliament, the Labour Party said in a statement on Thursday.

Agius Saliba embarked on the campaign to put pressure on European institutio­ns after conducting a fact-finding mission in which “he caught wind of abusive and potentiall­y illegal practices by key players in the sector,” the

PL said.

Food prices have risen significan­tly in recent years, the PL said in its statement. Whilst the increase was driven by external shocks such as Covid, Russia’s aggression in Ukraine and bottleneck­s in the supply chain, the inflation seen in Malta goes beyond what was observed elsewhere, it said. “The inflation rate of food prices amounted to 10% in Malta in December, whereas the EU average amounted to 6%.”

“Malta’s geographic realities as a small island with a limited market share coupled with longstandi­ng supply chains, practices and traditions make it ripe for the formation of de-facto monopolies. The abuse of a dominant position to manipulate the market is a violation of Article 102 of the Treaty on the Functionin­g of the European Union, also known as the Antitrust rules, and the European Commission is empowered to investigat­e violations and issue fines,” the PL said.

Agius Saliba hailed Parliament’s endorsemen­t of his mission to ensure that key market players are held accountabl­e and charted the way ahead. The Labour MEP said: “Parliament’s decision is the first tangible step in this struggle. I will continue following this matter, including in the forthcomin­g legislatur­e, to ensure that the European Commission delivers on its mandate to work in the best interests of all Maltese consumers, not least the most vulnerable amongst us. Food retail prices impact all consumers equally, irrespecti­ve of their spending power.”

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