Otago Daily Times

Produce prices may need to rise: grower group

- ERIC FRYKBERG

WELLINGTON: People might end up paying more for their fruit and vegetables, not less, after an inquiry into supermarke­ts, Horticultu­re New Zealand says.

The industry group says growers who supply produce to supermarke­ts do not always get paid the price they need to meet all their costs.

The Government this week confirmed the Commerce Commission market study Labour had promised during the election campaign.

The main focus of the investigat­ion will be the experience of the consumer, but it will also look at the way supermarke­ts procure their goods.

Horticultu­re New Zealand chief executive Mike Chapman said that could lead to an unexpected outcome.

Fruit and vegetable prices might have to rise to meet the real costs of producing them.

‘‘It may be that consumers at the end of this inquiry should pay more to enable their produce to keep on being produced,’’ Mr Chapman said.

His comments follow allegation­s of bullying by supermarke­ts from Food and Grocery Council chief executive Katherine Rich.

She said producers of everyday groceries were often forced to put up with whatever price and other conditions supermarke­ts imposed on them.

If they complained, their goods might be banished from supermarke­t shelves, Mrs Rich said.

Mr Chapman did not go quite that far, but he listed several problems.

‘‘We are basically price takers: the price that is paid is the price we get.’’

Growers produced weatherdep­endent perishable goods that must be sold on time, but the full costs of those and other problems such as spoilage were not always reflected in the price they got, Mr Chapman said.

He wanted complete transparen­cy in all transactio­ns involving supermarke­ts, but warned this might not lead to cheaper prices.

Growers needed to earn enough to cover the costs of growing produce, or they might have to shut down.

‘‘If you do not get enough money to run your business, you haven’t got a business,’’ he said.

Summerfrui­t New Zealand interim chief executive Richard Palmer said the two big supermarke­t chains had enormous power over the companies that produced the goods they sold.

‘‘There are instances where they can leverage that power, there is no doubt about that,’’ he said.

‘‘We are not necessaril­y suggesting there is a lot of bad behaviour, but there is a power imbalance.

‘‘We are price takers with a perishable product and we hope this investigat­ion will bring some transparen­cy to that.’’ — RNZ

❛ We are basically price takers: the price that is paid is the price

we get

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