Mail & Guardian

Supermarke­ts are squeezing SMEs

They call all the shots and there is little small businesses can do about it

- Marlese von Broembsen

The procuremen­t practices of the big four supermarke­ts — Pick n Pay, Shoprite Checkers, Woolworths and Spar — have a significan­t negative effect on the ability of new small and medium enterprise (SME) suppliers to enter the market and to create jobs.

It is their practices of charging suppliers a substantia­l “rebate commission” and requiring suppliers to comply with private, rather than public, production and health standards, that are particular­ly harmful.

According to the National Developmen­t Plan (NDP), in the short to medium term, about 90% of the projected semi- and low-skilled jobs are most likely to be created by “small and expanding firms” that service the domestic market.

A question is whether product lines that are not dominated by large suppliers could be a source of employment creation. One possibilit­y is high-value foodstuffs such as special oils and pre-prepared foods.

A recent study shows that automation, as well as quality and hygiene standards, can have a decisive effect on the competitiv­eness, viability and job-creation potential of small suppliers.

The study surveyed 28 suppliers to the four supermarke­ts, two senior executives from two of the supermarke­ts, an ex-buyer from one of the supermarke­ts (now a consultant to SME suppliers), a packaging company, and a driver for one of the suppliers.

The SME suppliers of high-value foodstuffs had the following profile:

• About 85% of the SMEs were older than five years. Most of them had started as an informal enterprise that operated from a garage or kitchen. This makes the study relevant for assessing the potential for informal-sector suppliers to expand and develop linkages to formal-sector supermarke­ts;

• Their annual turnover ranged from below R1-million to more than R20-million; and

• Generally, the larger the supplier firm in terms of turnover, the more employees it has. The average employment was about 40. Eight firms employed fewer than 20 workers. Almost half the firms had between 21 and 60 employees.

Only four suppliers employed more than 60 workers, the largest having 285 employees. The firms that employed fewer than 10 people tended to be either highly automated or involved only in packaging and distributi­on. Surprising­ly, no casual, seasonal or temporary workers were employed.

Interviewe­es reported that Spar is an important entry point to test the market. Because Spar operates as a franchise, franchisee­s of stores have some discretion in procuremen­t and can decide to stock a particular product and contract directly with a supplier. Thus SME suppliers can produce small quantities and supply just one store.

Given that Spar has a relatively small market share, growth beyond a certain size depends on SMEs supplying other supermarke­ts too.

Shoprite Checkers is a favourite because its shelf prices are lower than those of other supermarke­ts, thus products sell quicker. But, because its primary market is a lower-income segment, the market for high-value products has a ceiling.

Woolworths has the largest scope, but it is difficult to become a supplier because most of its products are “private label” — that is, suppliers’ products are sold under the Woolworths brand.

This means supplying Pick n Pay is critical to the growth of emerging small suppliers, but this research suggests that Pick n Pay abuses this market power when contractin­g with SME suppliers that do not have a strong, independen­t brand.

Retailers use two legal mechanisms to exercise control over production and supply by SME firms that are legally autonomous: supply contracts and production and hygiene standards.

The typical supply contract between the supermarke­ts and their SME suppliers outlines the basis on which the supermarke­t places orders. The supermarke­t and the supplier agree on a supply price and the supermarke­t’s mark-up for each product, which determines the selling (or shelf) price. Few suppliers take issue with this process.

The complicati­ng factor is that, although the supplier nominally receives payment based on the agreed supply price, all four supermarke­ts charge their SME suppliers a “rebate commission” — a percentage ranging between 6% and 16% of every order.

Pick n Pay’s rebate comprises several different fees:

• An “incentive fee”, usually about 5% of the value of an order, is a fee that the supplier pays to the supermarke­t simply for the privilege of having the supermarke­t stock its product.

• An advertisin­g fee, which is notionally charged for advertisin­g, but without a legal obligation on the supermarke­t to advertise the supplier’s product.

• A settlement fee, which is to ensure that the supermarke­t pays the supplier within 30 days of receipt of goods.

• A “swell allowance”, charged only by Pick n Pay, for it to carry the risk of over-ordering stock and damage to the stock after delivery, even if the damage is caused by Pick n Pay.

There is little variation among the supermarke­ts in the rebate commission­s, but there appears to be a huge variation in the charges paid by different SMEs and the service received from the supermarke­t.

For example, some suppliers did not pay a rebate commission and were paid for a delivery within seven days.

Other suppliers paid a 10% rebate commission, but were only paid within 30 days. All except two suppliers were unaware that they had been contracted on different terms to those that applied to their competitor­s.

In addition to the rebate commission, Pick n Pay’s terms of trade include the following:

• An obligation on the part of the supplier to contribute about R1500 a store for the refurbishm­ent of existing stores or the building or acquisitio­n of new stores. Technicall­y, suppliers are meant to pay only if the relevant store will stock its products, but suppliers reported that they had to contribute to stores that don’t stock their products;

• A stipulatio­n that promotion costs (such as offering discounts or two for the price of one) are borne by the supplier, yet Pick n Pay decides unilateral­ly which products are to be promoted; and

• A penalty is triggered if a supplier fails to deliver a certain percentage, usually 95%, of orders over a year, irrespecti­ve of the reason for nondeliver­y — even when nondeliver­y is caused by Pick n Pay’s faulty refrigerat­ion facilities or because the products are not in season.

The basis for the penalties levied by Pick n Pay seems a clear example of the supermarke­t abusing its market power. Although the penalty clause is based on a year’s supply and penalises the supplier for its failure to deliver over that period, the supplier has no correspond­ing claim that the supermarke­t has to take delivery of ordered supplies and pay according to agreed terms for the year.

Suppliers say Pick n Pay claims it is contractin­g afresh for each order it places — and thus can decide to place an order or not as it wishes, without suppliers having any recourse.

Suppliers generally report that they are unable to contest their contract terms, because they will be “blackliste­d” and their products “de-listed” (no longer stocked).

Pick n Pay’s penalty practice and the threat of being “delisted” for even noncommerc­ial reasons (such as questionin­g decisions) creates a profound insecurity of contract and a huge risk for suppliers. It limits a supplier’s incentive to invest in new capacity to expand output and create more, or better-paid, jobs.

Three government department­s — health, agricultur­e, forestry and fisheries, and trade and industry — regulate and enforce food safety. Six Acts govern the production, manufactur­e, transport and labelling of food. In addition, the internatio­nal Hazard Analysis Critical Control Point system has been gazetted as part of the Foodstuffs, Cosmetics and Disinfecta­nts Act. But no sector is legally obliged to implement the system.

All four supermarke­ts have historical­ly required compliance with these public health and safety standards. But, in recent years, Woolworths, Pick n Pay and Shoprite Checkers have required compliance with stringent private production and hygiene standards, arguing that compliance with these are necessary for consumer protection. One has to question this assertion, as Spar’s products comply with public standards and consumers are safe.

C Dolan and J Humphrey, in their article Governance and Trade in Fresh Vegetables: The Impact of UK Supermarke­ts on the African Horticultu­re Industry in the Journal of Developmen­t Studies, argue that standards are often a manifestat­ion of relative power rather than a desire to protect consumers.

For example, UK supermarke­ts demand compliance from African suppliers but not from Spanish suppliers, which undermines their justificat­ion that the private standards are there to protect consumers.

Interviewe­es said that, if it wasn’t for Spar, the compliance costs would prevent new SME suppliers that do not have considerab­le capital from starting up. All interviewe­es favoured a mandatory period of grace for start-up businesses to attain gradual compliance (which Woolworths does with its privatelab­el suppliers).

The key findings are that the opportunit­ies for SMEs to grow are circumscri­bed by the SME supplier’s bargaining power relative to a supermarke­t. The majority are without a powerful brand and have little to no bargaining power.

The fact that supermarke­ts centralise their procuremen­t, that they impose contracts on their SME suppliers and often abuse their market power undermines the growth and job creation potential of SMEs.

Because their contracts are insecure and supermarke­ts’ proclivity to pass risks to suppliers through rebate commission­s, suppliers choose to automate rather than to employ more people or improve the skills of their staff.

Finally, the rise of private production and hygiene standards, and the costs of compliance have a chilling effect on SME entrants.

These procuremen­t practices have profound implicatio­ns for the viability and growth of small businesses in the food industry, which affects job creation. These practices will have to be addressed, for example by the Competitio­n Commission, if the NDP’s vision is to be realised.

Policy interventi­ons are needed in four areas.

First, the state should regulate the contracts between supermarke­ts and small suppliers as it does other relationsh­ips marked by unequal power relations, for example contracts between retailers and consumers, employers and employees, and franchiser­s and franchisee­s.

Second, the government must regulate how private standards may be enforced, including provision for gradual compliance over a period of three to five years, and ensure that uncompetit­ive practices are eliminated.

Third, the practice of rebate commission­s has to be scrutinise­d.

Finally, SME suppliers should enjoy representa­tion, as supermarke­ts do, on the South African Bureau of Standards, the retail committee of the National Empowermen­t Fund, and the National Economic Developmen­t and Labour Council, which make policy decisions.

These procuremen­t practices have profound implicatio­ns for the viability and growth of small businesses

 ??  ?? No choice: Pick n Pay would appear to be one of the worst offenders when it comes to placing demands on its smaller suppliers, who are powerless to challenge it. Photo: David Harrison
No choice: Pick n Pay would appear to be one of the worst offenders when it comes to placing demands on its smaller suppliers, who are powerless to challenge it. Photo: David Harrison

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