The Herald

Budget and own-brand ranges are worst hit by raging supermarke­t inflation

- By Tom Torrance

PRICES of supermarke­t own-brand and budget products have increased more than premium and branded foods during the cost of living crisis, according to new figures.

Which? tracked annual inflation on tens of thousands of food and drink products across seven months at eight major supermarke­ts – Aldi, Asda, Lidl, Morrisons, Ocado, Sainsbury’s, Tesco and Waitrose – to find that own-brand and budget ranges have gone up by as much as 18 per cent.

This was compared to around 13% for premium own-brand ranges and 12% for branded items.

Many households have increasing­ly turned to cheaper products to offset soaring bills in the cost of living crisis, with latest Kantar figures showing own-label sales are up 11.7% year on year while the cheapest value own-label lines are up 46.3%.

Which? found the biggest year on year price increases on supermarke­t budget food and drink for the quarter ending October 31 were on Creamfield­s Soft Cheese (200g) at Tesco, up from 49p to 84p – an increase of 72% – and Sainsbury’s Simply Muesli (1kg) which went from £1.20 in 2021 to £2.03 in 2022 – a 70% increase.

The 20 worst budget products for inflation across the supermarke­ts for the same period also included Tesco products such as Hearty Food Co. 2 Garlic Chicken Kievs (260g), Growers Harvest Orange Juice ( 3X200ml) and Rosedene Farms Small Pear Pack (550g) all soaring above 60% in price over the year.

Sainsbury’s groceries also saw some of the highest inflation on budget items, such as its Hubbard’s Foodstore Sparkling and Still Waters (2L), J James & Family Fresh British Chicken Breaded Kyiv with Garlic Butter x2 (240g) and Mary Ann’s Dairy Soft Cheese 200g all going up in price by over 50%.

According to Which? findings, the worst supermarke­ts for overall inflation on food and drink were Aldi (up 19.6%) and Lidl (19%). However, both discounter­s still tended to be the cheapest of the big supermarke­t chains.

The discounter­s were followed by Asda (15.2%), Morrisons (14.4%), Waitrose (14.2%), Sainsbury’s (13.7%) and Tesco (12.6%). Ocado had the least inflation overall (10.3%).

 ?? ?? Food prices are rising steeply
Food prices are rising steeply

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