Waikato Times

Watchdog probes use of ‘specials’

- Tom Pullar-Strecker

Supermarke­ts are using ‘‘specials’’ to mislead consumers, boost profit margins and exert control over their suppliers, critics of the supermarke­t chains have told the Commerce Commission.

The commission was told some shoppers had become so used to frequent price promotions that they had become accustomed to simply not buying the products they wanted when they were not on discount.

Consumer NZ chief executive Jon Duffy led the assault on the supermarke­t’s practices on the second day of a Commerce Commission conference on the industry, saying they were intentiona­lly confusing consumers with ‘‘savings’’ that customers couldn’t be sure weren’t genuine.

Supermarke­t loyalty schemes were a form of ‘‘price discrimina­tion’’, he said.

‘‘In a highly concentrat­ed market, we think linking access to discounts to the mandatory collection of personal informatio­n is unfair and penalises consumers unwilling to trade their privacy to increase industry profits,’’ he said.

Sue Kedgley, of the National Council of Women, said that because there was ‘‘no monitoring, no scrutiny and no transparen­cy’’ of supermarke­ts, no-one could know what underpinne­d specials or how genuine they were.

Representa­tives from Countdown and Foodstuffs said they were making changes to their pricing and promotiona­l practices and switching their marketing towards ‘‘everyday low pricing’’.

Countdown strategy director John Gluckman said that was a trend for retailers around the world as they sought to improve trust.

Countdown now offered about 4000 products each week ‘‘at a low price, every day’’ through its ‘‘great price’’ programme, he said.

‘‘Our focus on ‘everyday low pricing’ means that whereas once the percentage of sales sold on promotion was in excess of 60 per cent, that is now well under 40 per cent.’’

But he said specials still had a role. ‘‘Kiwis love a bargain and they’re highly engaged with pricing and promotions, so it’s only natural that we would meet that demand for some ‘surprises and delight and some excitement’ during the shopping experience.’’

Foodstuffs North Island merchandis­e manager David Stewart said it was making a similar shift with regard to pricing and was working to provide ‘‘a stable price on key important, essential lines for the consumer’’.

But Giles Barker, a director of confection­ery company Bloomsberr­y, said ‘‘the two dominant supermarke­ts’’ used promotiona­l pricing to control the behaviour of suppliers.

‘‘I’ve worked with supermarke­ts in the United States, the UK and in Australia extensivel­y over 20 years and New Zealand is a tough place, with a veneer of ‘classic New Zealand collegiali­ty and goodwill’, but underlying it is a very aggressive position. If you’re not on promotion, you don’t sell, and people are turned off promotions to control their behaviour and send very strong messages to suppliers by the two supermarke­ts.’’

 ?? STUFF ?? Countdown and Foodstuffs have signalled a shift in emphasis away from promotions and towards ‘everyday low prices’.
STUFF Countdown and Foodstuffs have signalled a shift in emphasis away from promotions and towards ‘everyday low prices’.

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