The Niagara Falls Review

Loblaw joins Walmart and Metro in supply chain bullying tactics

- SYLVAIN CHARLEBOIS

Major Canadian grocers in Canada are at it again.

After Walmart and Metro, it was Loblaw’s turn to make changes to its vendor policies, implementi­ng new fees to support a $6-billion plan to improve its in-store and digital operations.

A letter written by Loblaw Companies president Sarah Davis was leaked to the media.

Over the summer, Walmart and Metro stated similar motivation­s.

Sobeys, the only one left, excluding Costco, opted not to copy Loblaw, Walmart and Metro. That decision was announced by Empire CEO Michael Medline last week.

This has been going on for years. Justificat­ions have ranged from mitigating climate change to implementi­ng new systems following new packaging rules. This time, it’s mostly about e-commerce, given Canadian’s appetites for more food deliveries. Digitizing food retailing will be a priority as we come out of COVID-19. But ultimately, it’s supply chain bullying.

The tone of Loblaw’s letter was telling, as if the company knew it would be shared broadly. Loblaw, as did Walmart and Metro, argued it was protecting consumers from higher food prices by implementi­ng new fees.

The message has been consistent over the years as grocers have positioned themselves as consumers’ socio-economic guardians.

But the true cost of these measures is an increasing­ly weakened food manufactur­ing sector and the slow disappeara­nce of the independen­t grocery retail landscape.

Since 2012, the food manufactur­ing sector has lost more than 40,000 jobs due to plant closures and lack of investment­s. Margins have become razor-thin, making it ever more challengin­g to justify any further investment­s in Canada, whether it’s a multinatio­nal company looking at increasing its footprint in Canada or smaller, family-owned operations trying to grow their business.

Maple Leaf Foods just built a $300-million plant in the U.S. to support its new plant-based division. And many of the ingredient­s needed to support its U.S.-based plant come from Canada.

Food manufactur­ing is really the centrepiec­e of our entire agri-food sector and it’s slowly eroding. Without a strong processing sector, farmers must look abroad for opportunit­ies, which in turn increases the chances of seeing more imported products.

Typically, manufactur­ing is where most of the innovation and growth come from in the food sector. Domestic research supported by the private sector to develop groundbrea­king ideas has been gutted over the last few years.

Measures by the larger chains are also affecting the ability of independen­t grocers to offer unique and often locally produced products. Major grocers are off-loading costs to suppliers while smaller, independen­t grocers must cover such costs themselves.

Independen­ts are typically more receptive and inclined to sell locally grown or locally designed food products. Many of our entreprene­urs get their only chance by dealing with independen­ts.

The dominating oligopoly in Canadian food retail will only further its position and threaten the ability of independen­ts to stay in the game. According to the Canadian Federation of Independen­t Grocers, the net profit for each store in

Canada before taxes was cent of sales.

That percentage is close to what Loblaw is asking its suppliers to pay in addition to existing fees. As such, instead of seeing food prices drop, as some major grocers are claiming, we could see the opposite happening.

Before COVID-19, fewer than 40 per cent of independen­t grocers were offering e-commerce. That percentage is likely to go up. But unlike Walmart, Metro, Loblaw and potentiall­y Sobeys, independen­ts are on their own.

One solution being presented is the creation of a code of practice between suppliers and grocers.

Sobeys, our country’s No. 2 grocer, is supportive of such a code. Under a code, a grocer would be required to deal with its suppliers fairly and lawfully.

This is certainly subject to many interpreta­tions, of course. But if such a code existed in Canada, Loblaw’s letter would not be compliant, at least in spirit.

Both Quebec and British Columbia have shown some level of interest in implementi­ng a type of code, as the United Kingdom and Australia have done. But discussion­s have been informal, at best.

It is complicate­d and the risks in implementi­ng such a code are real. An ill-designed code could entice grocers to go south and procure products from the U.S. or elsewhere, making the problem worse.

But we have reached a point where a solution is needed. Otherwise, we will eventually import many more products, hampering the agri-food sector’s growth.

Dr. Sylvain Charlebois is senior director of the agri-food analytics lab and a professor in food distributi­on and policy at Dalhousie University. Troy Media

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