Daily Press

Signs of ‘shrinkflat­ion’ grow

To combat packages of food getting smaller, France forces retailers to warn consumers

- By Liz Alderman

PARIS — For months, the shelves of Carrefour, France’s biggest supermarke­t chain, have been dotted with bright orange signs placed in front of Pepsi bottles, Lays potato chips and a variety of other foods whose packages are suspicious­ly smaller than they used to be.

“Shrinkflat­ion,” the signs say. “This product has seen its volume decrease and the price charged by our supplier increase.”

On Friday, the French government took steps to require every food retailer in the country to follow suit. By July 1, stores will have to plaster warnings in front of all products that have been reduced in size without a correspond­ing price cut, in a bid to combat the consumer scourge known as shrinkflat­ion.

“The practice of shrinkflat­ion is a scam,” Bruno Le Maire, France’s finance minister, said in a statement. “We are putting an end to it.”

The government is also encouragin­g shoppers to act as informers, urging those “who have doubts about the price per unit of measuremen­t displayed on the shelves” to flag it to authoritie­s via France’s consumer reporting app.

The fight against the practice of downsizing products without also downsizing their prices has picked up in the United States, where President Joe Biden has shamed food companies for raising prices even as inflation cooled.

Shrinkflat­ion has become a point of outrage for shoppers in France and a political issue for President Emmanuel Macron as consumers continue to grapple with a cost-of-living crisis. Although inflation has recently come down in Europe from the record highs of a year ago, the prices of many food products remain elevated.

Inflation in the eurozone fell to a new two-year low in March, the result of an aggressive campaign of interest rate increases by the European Central Bank. European government­s had also worked to ease prices for energy and food, through subsidies for electric bills and by negotiatin­g with food manufactur­ers to force prices down.

In France, inflation has fallen more than a third from a year earlier, but higher food prices have been persistent. A typical basket of food basics that includes items such as pasta and yogurt is 3% to 5% higher than it was a year ago, after a 16% surge for 2023.

Macron had promised to wrestle food costs down further this year. The government moved up annual price negotiatio­ns between suppliers and retailers in February and put pressure on companies to limit increases.

The shrinkflat­ion campaign is the latest weapon. Stores will have to display signs for two months after downsized products have been put on their shelves, according to the government decree issued Friday.

Prepackage­d foods, like shrink-wrapped deli cold cuts or foods sold in bulk, will be exempt.

Many global consumer goods companies have raised prices by double-digit percentage­s in the past year, attributin­g the increases to higher costs of ingredient­s and labor. Even so, many of those companies have reported expanding profits as they sell fewer items at higher prices.

France has submitted a proposal to the European Union that would force food retailers throughout Europe to carry out a shrinkflat­ion labeling campaign.

 ?? NATHALIE MOHADJER/THE NEW YORK TIMES 2022 ?? Shoppers at a grocery in Paris. By July 1, French stores will have to post “shrinkflat­ion” signs.
NATHALIE MOHADJER/THE NEW YORK TIMES 2022 Shoppers at a grocery in Paris. By July 1, French stores will have to post “shrinkflat­ion” signs.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States